You'll fight, and you'll shag, and you'll hate each other till it makes you quiver, but you'll never be friends.

Spike ,'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***


Topic!Cindy - Oct 11, 2004 3:35:12 pm PDT #714 of 3301
What is even happening?

Um, or get myself to the library this week...


libkitty - Oct 11, 2004 3:56:02 pm PDT #715 of 3301
Embrace the idea that we are the leaders we've been looking for. Grace Lee Boggs

sighs with satisfaction.

I love The Red Tent. I had thought of Barbara Kingsolver, perhaps Small Wonder : Essays. But the title seemed too close to our current book, and, as I mentioned before, I love The Red Tent.

And no, I haven't read our current book yet. I just can't seem to stay away.


Daisy Jane - Oct 12, 2004 10:44:45 am PDT #716 of 3301
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

Small World: I have not enough good things to say about it. When I wasn't actually cracking up I was all smirks.

There are about a dozen little moments- the fiction writers promising not to write about their encounter, the program that picked apart the genius's books to the point that he couldn't write. All brilliant.

It's going to be this weekend before I can get into anything less superficial- work, personal obligations. But, I don't want this discussion to flounder.

That said, I don't know why, but I had a fondness for Morris and adored Mrs. Maiden (?)- the old lady


Wolfram - Oct 12, 2004 11:06:49 am PDT #717 of 3301
Visilurking

It's going to be this weekend before I can get into anything less superficial- work, personal obligations. But, I don't want this discussion to flounder.

Ditto to all that. It really was the little moments. Cheryl's seat meddling. Persse's hitching a ride to Hawaii. Wainwright's 3 page speech. Desiree's wondering what the "reserve" is on Morris and whether the ransom will be tax deductible.


Trudy Booth - Oct 12, 2004 11:13:36 am PDT #718 of 3301
Greece's financial crisis threatens to take down all of Western civilization - a civilization they themselves founded. A rather tragic irony - which is something they also invented. - Jon Stewart

I'm enjoying it and am about half-way through.

I agree it's the little moments. And I enjoy when I see things coming, I like being in on something that none of the characters see.


sumi - Oct 12, 2004 11:31:23 am PDT #719 of 3301
Art Crawl!!!

I am really just beginning -- just finished the 2nd chapter at lunch.


justkim - Oct 13, 2004 6:20:29 am PDT #720 of 3301
Another social casualty...

Hm. It’s been much quieter here than I expected it to be. I will white-font a bit, in case people are still reading.

I’ve read more than my fair share of medieval romances, since medieval lit was the focus of my Master’s degree. I got the parallels that Lodge was making, but not until close to the end for most of them. (So much for those critical reading skills.) I about kicked myself for not picking up on “Arthur Kingfisher”.

I really liked Persse’s story, silly as it was. It was a true Romance, and I got that parallel early on. Morris’ story amused me, but I never expected him to complete his quest. I suppose I was disappointed that Lodge didn’t surprise me there. Phillip’s story just annoyed me, but I did love the subversion of the lost-love trope. Poor guy finds his “true love” and it all falls apart.

I liked Angelica; she struck me as my own personal Mary Sue. I loved Miss. Maiden, who reminded me very much of a professor I knew, but never got around to taking a class from. Everyone else I despised, pitied, or just didn’t care about. Maybe I just didn’t care for the juxtaposition of medieval types onto modern people.

There were pieces of writing that I adored. My favorite was when Persse arrived in Toyko and Lodge wrote the whole first paragraph without using any articles. I almost wish he had written the whole section that way, but I think it may have been too much. It was such a simple trick, but I though it was very effective.


Wolfram - Oct 13, 2004 7:14:03 am PDT #721 of 3301
Visilurking

Everyone else I despised, pitied, or just didn’t care about.

At first I really couldn't care about any of them. But most of the characters slowly grew on me. Even Swallow.

There were pieces of writing that I adored. My favorite was when Persse arrived in Toyko and Lodge wrote the whole first paragraph without using any articles. I almost wish he had written the whole section that way, but I think it may have been too much. It was such a simple trick, but I though it was very effective.

Of course I totally didn't pick up on this. I wonder what other goodies I carelessly missed.


Daisy Jane - Oct 13, 2004 7:21:41 am PDT #722 of 3301
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

I think there were so many, you were bound to miss a few, which is why I'm glad this is a book club book. I like reading the stuff other people picked up on.

It's like one of those picture games (if I can describe it correctly) where there are all sorts of visual word play things and you try to pick them out.


libkitty - Oct 14, 2004 1:52:40 pm PDT #723 of 3301
Embrace the idea that we are the leaders we've been looking for. Grace Lee Boggs

I am officially an idiot. I haven't been getting any of these things. I'll see if I can find them now that I know to look. It may making finishing the book a bit slower. Bah.