2021 Bookshelf Tour! // a scientist's home library (120+ books)

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  • Опубліковано 3 лип 2024
  • Tour of my entire bookshelf as a scientist! My home library has a bunch of books organized in the general themes of fiction, science, ecology and environment, Latin American literature, Indigenous literature, memoirs, feminism, witchcraft books, Greek mythology classics and more! I can't seem to pick a favourite genre and love reading about places and people all around the world.
    Add me on goodreads: / kristina-lynn
    **COMMUNITY LINKS***
    INSTAGRAM: @wildbiologist
    CHANNEL DISCORD: / discord
    SUPPORT MY WORK: / wildbiologist
    WEBSITE:
    EMAIL: biologistkristina@gmail.com
    0:00 Introduction
    02:13 Tolkien
    02:55 Greek mythology
    4:05 Random fiction
    05:25 Memoirs
    06:10 Americana
    07:38 Indigenous literature
    08:48 Latin American / Spanish
    10:43 Ecology & environment
    13:53 feminism
    14:35 science reference
    15:45 random non fiction
    16:13 witchy books
    16:30 random non-fiction
    17:00 more fiction

КОМЕНТАРІ • 50

  • @kristina_lynn
    @kristina_lynn  3 роки тому +11

    What books out of my collection have you read or caught your eye? Any suggestions? Let me know :)
    also, I forgot to talk about where I've sourced my books. Probably 90% of my books are from used bookstores that I've visited throughout my travels and at home, along with thrift stores - they're only $2 each at my thriftstore! I feel the most comfortable sustainability-wise buying used. Some have been gifted too and bought new to support the author.

    • @uuuyeee2084
      @uuuyeee2084 3 роки тому

      Hi, I think you would enjoy „This changes everything” by Noemi Klein. Btw thanks for your recommendations, I’ll check out if some of the books are available in my country :)

    • @kristina_lynn
      @kristina_lynn  3 роки тому

      Thank you for the suggestion - that title has been on my list for a long time!

    • @brotherjay9744
      @brotherjay9744 3 роки тому

      I love the one about trauma. Psychology would be my second love behind the study of life itself. Also love indigenous literature.

    • @kristina_lynn
      @kristina_lynn  3 роки тому +1

      Yes I love psychology books too, I read a lot on my e-reader so I don't have too many physical books but I love reading about brains

    • @emmanuelrodriguez2139
      @emmanuelrodriguez2139 3 роки тому

      I have read several books by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, I think he is one of my favorite authors. Also I bought the power of now by Eckhart Tolle but I haven't read it yet 😅. The last book I bought was "blonde indian" I felt inspired to buy it after reading a paragraph you posted on instagram stories

  • @cezza100
    @cezza100 2 роки тому

    Yay for science reference and ecology books - thanks!

  • @Crina-LudmilaCristeaAuthor
    @Crina-LudmilaCristeaAuthor 2 роки тому

    Snow falling on cedars 💛💛💛

  • @rebeccaromig9610
    @rebeccaromig9610 Рік тому

    Crow Lake is amazing!

  • @margotl9756
    @margotl9756 3 роки тому +1

    Your bookshelves are fantastic

  • @empress_craft
    @empress_craft Рік тому

    Wrote down so many suggestions from your shelves! Thank you so much for sharing your library! Some additions you might want to consider in the coming year: Spell of the Sensuous by David Abram, Becoming Animal by David Abram, Sand Talk by Tyson Yunkaporta, Thirteen Pathways of Occult Herbalism by Daniel Schulke, Under the Bramble Arch by Corinne Boyer, Under the Witching Tree by Corinne Boyer, A Branch from the Lightning Tree by Martin Shaw, Scatterlings by Martin Shaw, and The Earthsea Omnibus by Ursula K Le Guin. Based on what you liked in this video, all of these will be along those same lines!

  • @TaylorJPage
    @TaylorJPage 3 роки тому +2

    I loved The Odessey! Read it last year. Would love to read A Lab of One’s Own by Rita Colwell.

  • @amber965
    @amber965 3 роки тому +1

    I LOVED the Annihilation series! It's such a good bio-horror series(my favorite sub-genre of horror lol). I also recently read Galapagos by Kurt Vonnegut and I feel like you'd enjoy that book.

    • @kristina_lynn
      @kristina_lynn  3 роки тому +1

      ohh good suggestion, thanks - I love Breakfast of Champions and Slaughterhouse five so I'll have to check that one out

  • @chickenmom1022
    @chickenmom1022 3 роки тому +1

    Would highly recommend “Fever Dream” by Samanta Schweblin. It’s a novella, I read it in one sitting, it’s an amazing story. Don’t want to spoil it but it does sort of have an environmental warning to it

  • @renhartmann6249
    @renhartmann6249 3 роки тому

    I have a great book to recommend it’s called reason for hope and it’s an autobiography of Jabs Goodall’s life it’s very good.

  • @solarpunkalana
    @solarpunkalana 3 роки тому +2

    I absolutely love both Circe and The Silence of the Girls

    • @kristina_lynn
      @kristina_lynn  3 роки тому +1

      Circe is so good! The Silence of the Girls I liked less but maybe because it was like my third Iliad retelling I read so maybe it was getting a little old lol

    • @solarpunkalana
      @solarpunkalana 3 роки тому +1

      @@kristina_lynn Would you recommend Eckhart Tolle?

    • @kristina_lynn
      @kristina_lynn  3 роки тому

      I actually really like the Power of Now if I go into it with a really open mind. I read it sometimes before bed if I am stressed out. It can get a bit woo-woo at times but my woo-woo tolerance is pretty high before I put down a book LOL

    • @solarpunkalana
      @solarpunkalana 3 роки тому

      @@kristina_lynn Haha I like a bit of woo woo sometimes, helps to fend off the existential dread

  • @itsJA97
    @itsJA97 3 роки тому +2

    Wow, You have so many books!! How do you bring all of those with you when you’re moving around? Wildlife biologists usually move from one company to another every few years after the contract ends, right?

    • @kristina_lynn
      @kristina_lynn  3 роки тому +2

      I have had a permanent job for awhile but when I've moved I just pack them like everything else!

  • @TaylorJPage
    @TaylorJPage 3 роки тому

    o what are some good field guide or survival skill. Books?

  • @envionrnya1488
    @envionrnya1488 3 роки тому

    That's great dear I haven't read any of the book in your shelf coz I get bored soon after opening the book I wanna study these books it will be great for me. right now I am reading a book you have recommended in a video I wanna become an environmental scientist.

    • @kristina_lynn
      @kristina_lynn  3 роки тому +2

      Haha yes it can be a bit of a challenge in the digital age to focus on a book. I tuck away my devices and get a nice tea and pick something really interesting. Sometimes I have trouble focusing on non-fiction so I get lost in a good fantasy book

    • @envionrnya1488
      @envionrnya1488 3 роки тому

      @@kristina_lynn so what should I do to be in focus while reading a book I am reading Becoming by Michele.

  • @isabel_nogaf
    @isabel_nogaf 3 роки тому +1

    I recommended you to read: Women Race & Class - Angela Davies e Open Veins of Latin America - Eduardo Galeano 💕

  • @useyourillusion6996
    @useyourillusion6996 3 роки тому

    I don't read much fiction but I have to recommend the classic The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas. So well written. My non fiction stuff is controversial to many so might not fit your taste although I think you would enjoy Death in Yosemite and Death in Grand Canyon books if you haven't read already. I can't forget the Missing 411 series. Strange but factual disappearances of people (also found alive or dead under mysterious circumstances) in national parks and other rural areas.

    • @kristina_lynn
      @kristina_lynn  3 роки тому

      Oooh those stories sound spooky and interesting but maybe hit a bit too close to home.... ! Thanks for the suggestions :)

  • @JosephLuigi
    @JosephLuigi 3 роки тому

    Hey, how are you?
    Paulo Coelho is a Brazilian author, he speaks portuguese. 😁
    I liked your video! 🖤

  • @ShyamSharma-gs8tt
    @ShyamSharma-gs8tt 3 роки тому

    How do you retain all the information by reading that many books?

    • @abhijayarjunan1080
      @abhijayarjunan1080 3 роки тому +1

      Notes bruh. Also it's not necessary to retain all the information of a book. You can keep revisiting the information.

  • @irfansafi865
    @irfansafi865 3 роки тому

    Thank you mam 🌹
    I already

  • @tillycat3062
    @tillycat3062 2 роки тому +1

    👍🏻📚📖🤓🧐

  • @whatabouttheearth
    @whatabouttheearth 3 роки тому

    Indigenous and Witches both respect nature and live in North and South America and some read greek mythology, bam, they do connect.
    Im current studying 'History of Life' by Richard Cowen and 'Vertebrate Palaeontology' by Machael J. Benton and using the series 'Systematic Classification of Life' on Aron Ra's You Tube channel as a guide, this will continue until I have learned everything Aron Ra is saying.

  • @brotherjay9744
    @brotherjay9744 3 роки тому

    Not to cross and boundaries or anything, I’m just curious as one who has pursued science and has personally discovered all religion & spirituality to be a hoax. How do you balance such beliefs of magic while being grounded in science? Knowing that the laws of thermodynamics basically unravel any idea of “healing energy” or power. From a thermodynamic perspective, all energy is already within or will be traded off via digestion (plant dies, consuming species uses former living organism’s energy).

    • @kristina_lynn
      @kristina_lynn  3 роки тому +10

      Im not really sure what I believe yet but I enjoy reading about how people connect to nature and the planet on a spiritual level. I don't always see spirituality as always counter to science. it's what many cultures choose to believe to help us wrap our heads around why we exist on the planet and manage hardships. In some cultures nature is a key part of spirituality and folks have been purposely separated from the land (forced relocation of Indigenous people) so traditional nature based rituals can be a way to reconnect with their culture. I think that's fascinating. It can be a way to meditate and reflect on our connection with the planet outside of a purely resource-based/capitalist viewpoint of natural spaces, and something that humans have been doing for eons before organized religion came into the mix. I read a lot of environmental books about how harmful humans are to the planet, all the places we've destroyed, so it's refreshing to read about people who are connecting to the planet again, rediscovering old traditions and embracing their love of the earth

  • @floofcorgi
    @floofcorgi 3 роки тому

    you should definitely invest in a thousand splendid suns! it’s such a great book :) it focuses on women against the Taliban like Malala

  • @sudhaparmar6231
    @sudhaparmar6231 3 роки тому +1

    Your discord link gone

    • @kristina_lynn
      @kristina_lynn  3 роки тому +1

      Whoops thanks for letting me know! This should work discord.gg/8TmZPDZp

  • @matic3460
    @matic3460 3 роки тому

    Big fan mam........

  • @washerr186
    @washerr186 3 роки тому

    Do you read any political theory or anything?

    • @kristina_lynn
      @kristina_lynn  3 роки тому

      I don't think I've read too much political theory, any suggestions for the genre?

    • @whatabouttheearth
      @whatabouttheearth 3 роки тому

      @@kristina_lynn
      '33 Lessons on Capital' by Harry Cleaver
      'The Conquest of Bread' by Peter Kropotkin
      'Memoirs of Revolutionist' by Peter Kropotkin (I bet its on You Tube, Anarchists love this guy)
      'Kropotkin was no crackpot' an article by the one and only, Stephen Jay Gould (on the internet)
      'Darwins Malthusian Metaphore and Russian Evolutionary Thought, 1859 - 1917' by Daniel P. Todes (same subject as Goulds article above but more detail) (internet article)
      --'Against History, Against Leviathan' by Freddy Pearlman (part of it is on You Tube)
      -'The Myth of Human Supremacy' by Derrick Jensen
      -'A Peoples History of Civilization' by John Zerzan
      --'The Revolt of the Angels' by Anatole France
      --'The History of the Devil: The Horned God of the West - Magic and worship' by R. Thompson (archaic magic, cave art, development of horned gods, retention of horned practices in festival and some of the xtian concept of the drivel) (great old book, highly recommend)
      --'Witches, Midwives & Nurses: A History of Woman Healers' Barbara Ehrenreich
      --'Burning Women: The European Witch Hunts, Enclosure and The Rise of Capitalism' By Lady Stardust
      --'Caliban and the Witch: Women, Body and Primitive Accumulation' by Sylvia Federici
      --'The Migration of Symbols' by Goblet D'Alviella (can be found online. Maybe at 'Library Genesis')
      --'The Golden Bough (of redundancy)' Frazer (ok Frazer we get it, stop beating a dead horse)
      --'Venus: An Archeological Study of Women" by Paul Carus (orig 1916 w Venus statue on cover highly recommended)
      -'The Nature of Magic' by Susan Greenwood
      --'Pomo Bear Doctors' by S.A. Barrett
      --'Animals and the Origins of Dance' by Steven Lonsdale
      --'The Oracle: Ancient Delphi and tje Science Behind its Lost Secrets' by William J. Broad