Do you have book addiction?
I have a problem; whenever I start a new interest, the first thing I have to do is buy too many books on the subject.
I have practice books for guitar and banjo I've put on the shelf and never opened. I know I should work through a book before buying a new one, but there's always something interesting that demands to be bought!
I have Standards of Excellence and Accent on Achievement. I need to get Rubank this weekend.
I need to get "The Oboe" by Geoffrey Burgess. Is there a good book on Clarinet history?
I have "The Bassoon" by James B. Kopp, which has excellent material on the curtal and baroque bassoon. I can't afford a bassoon, but I would like a tenoroon. And I wish Yamaha would make a plastic dulcian. I'd buy it.
One of my favorites was "Never Too Late" by John Holt. It's all about how he took up cello again after spending his adult life without playing.
What about you folk? Do you tend to buy too many books, and which ones are your favorites?
I have a problem; whenever I start a new interest, the first thing I have to do is buy too many books on the subject.
I have practice books for guitar and banjo I've put on the shelf and never opened. I know I should work through a book before buying a new one, but there's always something interesting that demands to be bought!
I have Standards of Excellence and Accent on Achievement. I need to get Rubank this weekend.
I need to get "The Oboe" by Geoffrey Burgess. Is there a good book on Clarinet history?
I have "The Bassoon" by James B. Kopp, which has excellent material on the curtal and baroque bassoon. I can't afford a bassoon, but I would like a tenoroon. And I wish Yamaha would make a plastic dulcian. I'd buy it.
One of my favorites was "Never Too Late" by John Holt. It's all about how he took up cello again after spending his adult life without playing.
What about you folk? Do you tend to buy too many books, and which ones are your favorites?