ahilborne is currently reading Wikipedia Tour: The Grand Tour and The Intellectual Devotional.
I’ve been a DailyLit member since August 29, 2007.
Books
- The Intellectual Devotional 65% complete
- Wikipedia Tour: The Grand Tour 77% complete
- Poem-a-Day Collection 100% complete
- MBA Mondays II finished
- MBA Mondays finished
- Happiness Quotations finished
- Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town finished
- The Art of War finished
- America's Greatest Hits finished
- Masters of Verse finished
-
A Modest Proposal finished
- Poems by Emily Dickinson suspended
- Famous Stories Every Child Should Know suspended
- Anna Karenina suspended
- The Aeneid suspended
Posts
Feedback - Feedback Forum
I have a couple of questions:
- how can I change DailyLit's notion of my timezone?
- why do I have to reply to a subscription email, every time I choose a new book?
Where Are the Children? - How can I "Try it for free" ???
In the most recent DailyLit News I read, "- Mary Higgins Clark: Best-selling author Mary Higgins Clark comes to DailyLit with Where are the Children? This thriller will take you to Cape Cod, a summer paradise that becomes one woman's nightmare. TRY FOR FREE."
Please can someone explain to me, exactly how can I do this? This is a paid-for book, and the link in the email doesn't take me to some special page which offers the first chapter(s) free.
I have already asked this of DailyLit management (via email) but I have had no response. I am not impressed.
Feedback - Feedback Forum
I've just read "I Thought Once How Theocritus Had Sung," in the "Late, Great Poets" series. It has proper em-dashes! So much of the rest of your material only has two en-dashes, looking like this: "--". It's incredibly nasty, especially when (as in some poems) dashes are somewhat over-used. Can't you go through your library and do a search-and-replace (and proof-read :-) one with the other, please?
A Modest Proposal - Quite interesting.
I've known of "A Modest Proposal" for a long time and I have appreciated the opportunity to read it. It only took a handful of episodes to finish it.
I would mark this down as "interesting" and I am glad to have read it. I can quite see how, at the time, it might have outraged some people -- the same people who don't "get" irony today, I would imagine. The basic premise is preposterous, but he then carries things to their logical conclusion, without missing a step.
Feedback - Feedback Forum
I just want to say thank you for the Wikipedia Grand Tour. I'm finding it fascinating (sometimes) and the DailyLit chunked version is just what I need.
Before that I tried Moby Dick and didn't do so well :)
Bugs - Frequency
Darn! I can't seem to get an installment per week any more. What happened?
