tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11363027.post5362330665897196860..comments2024-03-28T20:57:01.458-05:00Comments on driftglass: Taxicab driftglasshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09379167083253389153noreply@blogger.comBlogger8125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11363027.post-54432190376852393462016-02-21T13:33:26.598-06:002016-02-21T13:33:26.598-06:00What memories! When I was a little one we had the...What memories! When I was a little one we had the 20 (I think) volume Book of Knowledge, and the Britannica came into the house when I was about 10. Hours and hours and hours spent on the floor with open volumes. And of course there was the 2 volume Compact OED, the one with print the size of flea shit and the magnifying glass...Marion in Savannahhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14150522161461940646noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11363027.post-3797032002257053122016-02-21T07:18:44.301-06:002016-02-21T07:18:44.301-06:00My parents' encyclopedias got a serious workou...My parents' encyclopedias got a serious workout. I couldn't believe how much I could find.Unknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03912693209197682390noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11363027.post-10521845028936762012016-02-20T16:49:12.321-06:002016-02-20T16:49:12.321-06:00I had an entire set of Encyclopedias with the matc...I had an entire set of Encyclopedias with the matching bookcase, as a kid. I can't remember what year they were from, but I definitely spent hours just going through them. That thirst for knowledge and understanding has continued to this day, as I'd rather read and research whatever interests me at a particular point in time, than watch television or movies, or spend time posting to the social media sewer.<br /><br />There should be a detailed questionnaire that all people take, which fleshes out those people who are generally interested in learning and understanding, from everyone else. And those people should work together to describe the rest of the world, in narrative form of course, for everyone else. Unfortunately, the marketers are the ones who describe the world around us, and they're just selling garbage to line their own pockets. <br /><br />Cinesiashttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14996950964848333121noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11363027.post-14850009218129637302016-02-20T10:26:28.267-06:002016-02-20T10:26:28.267-06:00Saw the picture of the WB and it brought back the ...Saw the picture of the WB and it brought back the same memories for me. I wonder what kind of nostalgia younger kids today will experience with the Internet.mathguyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02591559181439884572noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11363027.post-36699690599472840352016-02-20T09:58:42.909-06:002016-02-20T09:58:42.909-06:00One of my high school teachers took a summer job s...One of my high school teachers took a summer job selling World Books. I'm so glad my parents bought a set. I also used browse as you did. A nice memory.Davishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08469262537314894217noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11363027.post-71311419290453347712016-02-20T08:57:18.122-06:002016-02-20T08:57:18.122-06:00Thinking back to the bookshelf in my childhood hom...Thinking back to the bookshelf in my childhood home - first the Book of Knowledge (great articles on dinosaurs), then Encyclopedias Brittanica and Americana. And, of course, the annual updates that we never really read.<br /><br />All supplied by door-to-door salespeople, who must have lugged literally tons of books to their customers, each year. And starting in the 90s, all erased in less than a decade.<br /><br />It all seems so quaint, now (and you're right, DG, nostalgic). It makes me even sadder to think that the same fate probably awaits physical libraries.myxzptlkhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12713775812128162724noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11363027.post-12010388606531082732016-02-20T07:03:18.485-06:002016-02-20T07:03:18.485-06:00Your mention of World Book Encyclopedia brought ba...Your mention of World Book Encyclopedia brought back memories of my own. Our house had a set of encyclopedias printed in about 1942. The World Books had good pictures!<br /><br />I started to sneer at World Books when I compared the old encyclopedia's coverage of Adolf Hitler with the World Book. The old one was very neutral(allies might lose the war), while World Book was sneering propaganda in its coverage. I lost faith in the 'Meritocracy' of encyclopedias about then.<br /><br />Wikipedia, I find, is quite valuable, in that I go to it for definitions or a general outline of a subject. I've read enough glowing drivel about favourite politicians to not ever quote it as an authority. I DO appreciate the work that folks go through to research and create an article.Pete Needhamhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04485986936527764641noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11363027.post-44189692726574447782016-02-20T01:05:58.030-06:002016-02-20T01:05:58.030-06:00For all our present disdain for gatekeepers, back ...For all our present disdain for gatekeepers, back in the days of the 1960 Encyclopedia Britannica with annual years it was a real job and it cost real money to put information into a book that would be distributed to tens of millions of libraries and household. One could, in a crude sense, hyperlink but the associated articles had to pass a certain bar of rigour and relevance. <br /><br />So I consider Stand on Zanzibar to be a remarkable piece of work. From the first page we are dealing with a flood of words, only a few of which have any meaning and that only understood well after the fact. In the same sense, <i>The Garden of Forking Paths</i> is an incomplete, but not false, image of the universe.Mike Lumishhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14083545582415707582noreply@blogger.com