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***
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.
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.
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.
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.
Awww, that makes it sound too much like work. It's such a fun read, and I think it works perfectly well on just the surface level of storytelling. It's just that the book also has several layers which allow little frizzles of pleasurable recognition when you latch on to them.
It's such a fun read, and I think it works perfectly well on just the surface level of storytelling. It's just that the book also has several layers which allow little frizzles of pleasurable recognition when you latch on to them.
Which also make it a good book to discuss because there's so much stuff to get that if you miss some, other people might have picked them up.
Just a quick reminder for John Sweden and billytea that we are still waiting for book selections. I think, ideally, we should have at least two months of books in the hopper.
Just a quick reminder for John Sweden and billytea that we are still waiting for book selections. I think, ideally, we should have at least two months of books in the hopper.
Oh, sorry. I didn't realise you wanted one from me yet.
Dirt Music, Tim Winton.
Me too, I didn't realize you were waiting on me.
Mister Sandman, by Barbara Gowdy.
Reasons? (I didn't nominate her book)
A) She's Canadian and she's good,
and
2) She led a creative writing class I was in, some years back
Should we update the first post, so that it reflects the current discussion, and the upcoming selections?