Book: Captain, you mind if I say grace? Mal: Only if you say it out loud.

'Serenity'


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***


Wolfram - Jan 17, 2005 6:03:59 am PST #857 of 3301
Visilurking

Yup. And how did you not get a new post number?

ETA: For the with-it challenged, like me, post number doubling explained in BBABB.


justkim - Jan 17, 2005 7:17:08 am PST #858 of 3301
Another social casualty...

Weird. I saw your post in BBABB, but I hadn't noticed earlier.

Anyway.

Wolfram, I know you posted up-thread that you were excited about talking about the book. Anything in particular jump out at you?

I just finished Saturday, and I'm still processing it. I think I'm overall "meh" about it. I liked some of the characters. Didn't care one way or the other about others. I think discussion may help me process things better.

It seemed to me that Gowdry threw together every dysfunctional family cliche she could think of and tried to write a story to tie them all together with, imo, mixed results.

I am also frustrated that I can't listen to Joan's composition, because I think it would be neat to hear.


Wolfram - Jan 17, 2005 8:55:43 am PST #859 of 3301
Visilurking

Kim, I had mixed feelings about the book when I finished it too. I was really excited starting out because right from the first couple of pages I found myself intrigued. Sure the family was dysfunctional, yet they were oddly functional at the same time. It felt a little like The Royal Tenenbaums meets American Beauty.

I liked the way Gowdy intertwines the stories, and really fleshed out the characters with the notable and disappointing exception of Joan. I was a little let down too, that we never heard the actual composition. But I believe it was the author’s intention to leave Joan obscure and use her as a method of defining the rest of the family.

I thought the parents' mutual homosexuality and its resolution worked. Older sister's (memfault) near asexuality also worked. NSM, younger sister's (memfault) hypersexuality although it was an interesting contrast to her sister and her parent's lack of heterosexual urges.

All in all, it was a fun read. I wasn't so enamored by it that I'd run out and read all of Gowdy's works, but I didn't have to trudge through it either.


justkim - Jan 21, 2005 8:55:13 am PST #860 of 3301
Another social casualty...

Poor lonely Book Club thread.

What is the significance of the song "Mr. Sandman"? Why did Gowdy choose this song to build her narrative around?

I think it may have something to do with the lyric "Mr. Sandman, I'm so alone/ain't got nobody to call my own" and the idea that Al refers to himself as "Yours" to Gordan and Sophia.


Topic!Cindy - Feb 01, 2005 4:31:09 am PST #861 of 3301
What is even happening?

Book Clubbers, do you think this thread is a failed experiment? Should we think about closing it, or do you think things will pick up now that the holidays have passed, and most of us are in the dead of winter?


sumi - Feb 01, 2005 4:36:42 am PST #862 of 3301
Art Crawl!!!

Well, I just never managed to get this particular book!

There are many many more that might tempt me.


Connie Neil - Feb 01, 2005 4:56:07 am PST #863 of 3301
brillig

Should we think about closing it, or do you think things will pick up now that the holidays have passed, and most of us are in the dead of winter?

Should pick up. I'm a slacker who keeps forgetting to read the books.


brenda m - Feb 01, 2005 5:13:16 am PST #864 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

I'd like to keep it. The Thanksgiving to New Years period was kind of insane for me so I got out of the swing of things here, but I'm hoping to jump back in. Even in the ones where I didn't have time or wasn't done in time to participate in discussion, I enjoyed reading the books and following up on the conversation when I could.

ETA - did we shift the discussion dates over the holidays from what's in the first post? I seem to remember something like that. Either way, looks like we need to do some book picking if we mean to go forward.


Daisy Jane - Feb 01, 2005 5:22:32 am PST #865 of 3301
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

If we need more books to pick, I'd like to suggest either Louisiana Power and Light or Confederacy of Dunces. Both are light and fun which might help get people back into the groove and hey! LaF2F.

Though CoD actually is in NO, LP&L is probably my favorite for the narrator's insights.


justkim - Feb 01, 2005 5:32:27 am PST #866 of 3301
Another social casualty...

I would like to keep the thread. I have really enjoyed participating in and reading the discussions, even when I don't feel I have much to add.

I know I have not volunteered to be a book selector, so I sort of feel like I am speaking out of turn here, but I wonder if the choice of books hasn't been limiting discussion. As much as I enjoyed The Red Tent and Mister Sandman, they weren't action packed, and I'm finding it almost impossible to get into Dirt Music because again there is very little action (a quarter of the way through). It's not they aren't good books or somehow unworthy, but I find it hard to say anything interesting about them. I did love reading the comments about Dinah's story in relation to the Midrashim.

I'm not saying every book needs to be a rollicking adventure through space and time, but three books in a row about domestic troubles and internal struggles is a little much for me personally.