Cindy, organizing all that is far from lazy. What's lazy is me, who loves lists and categories and order but usually waits for kind souls like you to do it for me.
And I think KristinT's bouncing is contagious, because I'm so excited about this, and I want to know which book to start reading! (Patience, also not one of my virtues.)
If you find it's going to make too long of a list, you can take a short cut of sorts. You can link the post that contains the rec, by right clicking on the post number. The select . Then paste it into your post.
Hey, thanks. That's one of those things I should be able to figure out but never in a million years would. Very cool.
Sneaking in while it's a little quiet to see about getting the post colon quote and the description set (I think the slug has been consensed). Here are the frontrunners from a quick scan, maybe we can hava mini deathmatch (I'm tired of looking at the "quotey thing" placeholder):
: Depends on the Book
: Isn't the Point of Computers to Replace Books?
: I-I Must Consult My Books
: It Should Be Smelly
Description (without the part about nattering):
This thread is a focussed discussion group. Please refer to [link] for the current topic, and upcoming book discussions.
I like, "Isn't the Point of Computers to Replace Books?"
I'll throw "Geez, crack a book sometime" in there...although has that been used already for another thread?
Was it a literary once, or did it get voted down?
And, Cindy, bwah, but it is not my book. I am a rather devoted Simon's Bitch, though, if that just wouldn't bring up such negative associations in a crime reporter.
Would it be helpful for those of us who nominated books to come back with a condensed version of our recommendation? Here's mine:
The Education of Henry Adams by Henry Adams
Part autobiography, part cynical observation of politics and progress. An insightful and at times darkly humorous exploration of both a remarkable man and the tumultuous age in which he lived.
Eventually I'm going to start pimping for Gospel by Wilton Barnhardt and The Gastronomical Me by M.F.K. Fisher, but for this round, I'd like to throw a few more "classics" into the mix.
Hard Times by Charles Dickens
In our discussions in Literary, a number of people said they'd like to read Dickens, either because they never had or because they'd only read Great Expectations in high school, which is a good way to learn to loathe Dickens. (It's a great book, but perhaps not something to tackle in the 9th grade.) Hard Times is a relatively short work that explores Dickens' social concerns and the affects of an abusive system on both the abused and the people who profit from their work.
A Pairing:
Pudd'nhead Wilson by Mark Twain and To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
Each book includes a mystery, an exploration of the effects of race and racism, and a courtroom drama. Together I think they could provoke an interesting discussion on the effects of racism and culture, plus they're both wonderful books. Pudd'nhead Wilson is Twain at his most savage and his most funny; To Kill a Mockingbird features one of the more engaging children in literature and one of the better portraits of quiet heroism.
What about calling the thread "809". dewey decimal for literary criticism.