Mal: Zoe, why do I have a wife? Jayne: You got a wife? All I got is that dumbass stick sounds like its raining. How come you got a wife?

'Our Mrs. Reynolds'


The Buffista Book Club: the Harry Potter iteration  

This thread is a focused discussion group. Please see the first post below for the current topic and upcoming book discussions. While natter will inevitably happen, we encourage you to treat this like a virtual book club and try to keep your posts in that spirit.

By consensus, this thread is reopened specifically to discuss Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. It will be closed again once that discussion has run its course.

***SPOILER ALERT***

  • **Spoilers for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows lie here. Read at your own risk***


JenP - Jul 14, 2004 6:48:54 am PDT #157 of 3301

Then again, if someone objects to the desciption, that will likely come up in Burea when we ask for the slug, descrip. and subtitle. So, David's amended description, then?


Kathy A - Jul 14, 2004 6:52:21 am PDT #158 of 3301
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

I'll third Strega's nomination for The Good Soldier--read it for my modern lit class, and it's good for provoking great discussion about POV!


Wolfram - Jul 14, 2004 6:52:37 am PDT #159 of 3301
Visilurking

Then again, if someone objects to the desciption, that will likely come up in Burea when we ask for the slug, descrip. and subtitle. So, David's amended description, then?

Works for me.


Jess M. - Jul 14, 2004 7:05:26 am PDT #160 of 3301
Let me just say that popularity with people on public transportation does not equal literary respect. --Jesse

yep, I mentioned The Good Soldier in book club a couple weeks ago, very interesting, weighty book. Not a quick read, though it's relatively short.


Gris - Jul 14, 2004 7:24:13 am PDT #161 of 3301
Hey. New board.

I think it'd be come a popularity contest

Well, the original idea of the Select the Selectors plan was that the selectors would be selected randomly. Sorta kills the popularity thing. But I'm not feeling the pushing urge.

I'm going out of town soon. Hope to check back and find a working book club when I get back! Good luck, everybody!

(Yay books.)


Hayden - Jul 14, 2004 7:31:08 am PDT #162 of 3301
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

Well, the original idea of the Select the Selectors plan was that the selectors would be selected randomly. Sorta kills the popularity thing. But I'm not feeling the pushing urge.

D'oh! I didn't catch that. Brainpower is on low today.


Wolfram - Jul 14, 2004 7:51:42 am PDT #163 of 3301
Visilurking

Brainpower is on low today.

Me too. I think there's something going around.


Jon B. - Jul 14, 2004 8:53:29 am PDT #164 of 3301
A turkey in every toilet -- only in America!

I guess I assumed because nobody objected to this it had the tacit approval of the stompies. But in re-read that may not be the case.

Errr... well I'm a stompy and I'm fine with it. But I don't think it's for a stompy to decide.

Speaking of stompies, if you want to use Lilty's first post as a "sticky" post, and she's not around, any stompy can edit any post (bwahahahaha!).


Lyra Jane - Jul 14, 2004 8:55:11 am PDT #165 of 3301
Up with the sun

I'm reading The Good Soldier now, and I'd be thrilled to discuss it with Buffistas once I'm done.

Also, I'd like to sneak in a rec for Barbara Gowdy's Mister Sandman. The amazon.com review is here:

This riotous account of "the family unit" was a smash hit in Europe, Canada, and England. In the Times Literary Supplement, author Margaret Atwood (The Handmaid's Tale) praised Barbara Gowdy's novel as surprising and delightful, containing moments "at the same time preposterous and strangely moving." The Canary family guards many secrets, including the mystery of tiny daughter, Joan, who was dropped on her head at birth and has never spoken. Joan plays the piano like Mozart, yet has never had a lesson. The outrageous hilarity rises into a climax that creates a stunning new definition of family togetherness.

Also seconding the suggestions of Girl in Landscape, which has been on my meaning-to-read-it list for years, Homicide , Neil Gaiman's Sandman (though that may be a hard one because not all libraries stock graphic novels, and new it costs about $15 for one volume. but if we can do it, we should.) and anything by Lorrie Moore.


DavidS - Jul 14, 2004 8:59:55 am PDT #166 of 3301
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Small World - David Lodge: Not only one of the funniest books I've ever read, but also (a) a neat structural parody of Medieval romances - so a history lesson tossed in, (b) a satire of academia and specifically deconstruction jargon. But don't worry - it's incredibly fun and absorbing, the kind of book you can't wait to pick up again.

Rides of the Midway - Lee Durkee: Growing up Southern, teen boys, beautifully rendered. Also a ghost from a baseball mishap.

At Swim Two Birds - Flann O'Brien: One of the great comic novels. Irish to the very very core. Told in parts as a scathingly hilarious account of a scholarly ne'er do well, and then leavened with big chunks of Irish lore, told beautifully and comically.

Available Light - Ellen Currie: A book so good I tracked down her scant short stories. A woman, a man with a saxophone. Romantic, Irish again. Finding your place in the world after mistakes. Beautifully written and affecting.