I'm not evil again. Why does everyone think that?

Angel ,'Sleeper'


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***


Amy - Jul 15, 2004 12:37:16 pm PDT #269 of 3301
Because books.

For this to work, I think we need to plan ahead.

I think I followed that. Kind of. Essentially, you want to pick Book 2 (and even Book 3?) now, so we can start reading those (or those of us who are fast readers can, anyway) and be ready for a new discussion if talking about The Intuitionist doesn't take as long as we thought, yes?

I'm up for it. My To Be Read pile always needs new additions.


brenda m - Jul 15, 2004 12:38:36 pm PDT #270 of 3301
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

*blushes deeply* aww thanks. I don't mind, and while I love my suggestions, I think I'm going to pick someone else's because y'know, I've already read the books I chose.

Works for me too, and mine'll also come out of the list we've developed already. (And thanks for the Nilly on that one, I've been swamped and unable to keep up.)

I think your idea is a good one Wolfram, and I don't think it'll seem as complicated once it's all set up and scheduled.


sumi - Jul 15, 2004 12:58:26 pm PDT #271 of 3301
Art Crawl!!!

I'm excited! My local library has The Intuitionist on their shelves!


Wolfram - Jul 15, 2004 1:09:04 pm PDT #272 of 3301
Visilurking

Is that more or less the proposal?

No, I'm trying to keep the beginning dates of discussion flexible, and set the reading deadlines for the next couple of books earlier than would be necessary if discussion proceeded on the normal timeline to allow us to jumpstart new discussion if the situation demands it. IOW, we control the timeline, we don't let it control us.

AmyLiz hits the concept on the head:

I think I followed that. Kind of. Essentially, you want to pick Book 2 (and even Book 3?) now, so we can start reading those (or those of us who are fast readers can, anyway) and be ready for a new discussion if talking about The Intuitionist doesn't take as long as we thought, yes?

I also think we should guarantee each selection two weeks (at least at the outset) and allow consensus to be used to determine if a discussion is deader than a dead thing and ready to be put down after that.


-t - Jul 15, 2004 1:13:02 pm PDT #273 of 3301
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

So, would we need to be able to finish a book in two weeks? Because that seems a little fast to me.

I don't know that I can discuss Book A while reading Book B, for one thing. I'm gonna want a little time to discuss The Intuitionist and flip back to parts I want to re-read, or that make a particular point or what have you before going on to whatever Heather picks.

But I can jump into the discussion when I've caught up, also.


Daisy Jane - Jul 15, 2004 1:16:18 pm PDT #274 of 3301
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

I could pick a short book- no I hear you 2 weeks is likely not enough time to have read the next book.


DavidS - Jul 15, 2004 1:19:20 pm PDT #275 of 3301
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Little bit of Colson Whitehead trivia. Before he wrote The Intuitionist (his first novel) he was the tv writer/critic for the Village Voice -- and a Buffy fan.

Here's an essay by Colson titled I Worked At An Ill Conceived Internet Start Up And All I Got Was This Lousy Idea For a Novel. (It's about his second novel, John Henry Days.) There's also a picture of him there if you want to take a peek.


Topic!Cindy - Jul 15, 2004 1:21:56 pm PDT #276 of 3301
What is even happening?

I like Wolfram's suggestion, but it's hard to follow.

Tell me about it. Just re-reading it gave me headache.

So glad this wasn't just me.

Kate, I was off looking, and it looks like they have it one town over. I'm going away soon, so I'll just hop over there tomorrow. I can use my local library card, there. I would actually buy it, but it would come while I'm away, and that's no good.

Heather, it would be really nice if you could pick book 2 really soon, just for my selfish reasons.


Susan W. - Jul 15, 2004 1:23:12 pm PDT #277 of 3301
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

FYI, I've decided not to do the book club after all, largely because the last thing I need right now is another time commitment, but also because upon reflection I realized that the only way I'd ever be happy in a book club is if it had a focus related to something I'm naturally interested in--like the science book club I would've joined at my old workplace if only I'd discovered it sooner than two weeks before I left. Or maybe a Georgian/Regency book club combining history and fiction from and about the era, which I just thought of and decided would be lots of fun. So if anyone ever wants to start a book club where we read Austen, O'Brian, Heyer, a good Wellington biography, etc., let me know.

But anyway, the reason I'm posting this is because I figured I should let people know I was leaving so the books I suggested ( Jaran and Persuasion) could be taken off the table unless someone else wants to champion them.


Wolfram - Jul 15, 2004 1:23:28 pm PDT #278 of 3301
Visilurking

So, would we need to be able to finish a book in two weeks? Because that seems a little fast to me.

This is the part I can't seem to explain right. If implemented right we will always have at least a month's notice on each book. Unless people think they literally can't read more than 12 books a year.