She's not just a blob of energy, she's also a 14-year-old hormone bomb.

Spike ,'The Killer In Me'


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 - Jul 13, 2004 1:09:29 pm PDT #86 of 3301
What is even happening?

I would like to read Henry Adams, but not right now. It's summer. I'll be on vacay for part of the reading time. I want fiction. It doesn't have to be fluff, but I don't want to be reading historical biographical material at the beach.


libkitty - Jul 13, 2004 1:12:11 pm PDT #87 of 3301
Embrace the idea that we are the leaders we've been looking for. Grace Lee Boggs

I second Nova's idea. With two caveats - First, I think we should pick a book from the list of recs to start and then go with selectors. Second, I think it's important that the selector propose more than one book and get some feedback from the club and/or let people consense/vote on several book proposals. I don't think it would be good if Buffista X could sign up to be a selector and then force the club to spend a month on [your worst literary nightmare here] without any recourse.

I agree on this, including the caveats. Great to have an early cutoff, too, or I could see us talking about how to do it forever. I think Wolfram should pick the first book from the list (I like the idea of the Potok book, since I love the author but haven't read Asher Lev , but am really fine with any of the books.). Perhaps early in the month (this time, shortly after the first book is announced), someone could annouce a call for choosers. People could volunteer, and one could be chosen randomly. I like the Nilly-esque number method that was described earlier (but which I now cannot find. Argh.). It just seems so appropriate for this group. Having said all of this, I have no strong feelings about method, and am really looking forward to getting started. This looks like a blast!


Nutty - Jul 13, 2004 1:21:47 pm PDT #88 of 3301
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

I think we shouldn't make a pool of books and then randomly choose books.

This is very important. The way that book clubs live is by finding books all or most of the members want to read all or most of the time. So, I think it's a good idea to Mr. Poll or discuss/consense each choice, rather than allow any one person to choose.

I'll confess, of the list thus far, I've ever heard of about 5, and it is hard to work up enthusiasm for books totally unknown to me.

I like the idea of paired books we read in tandem, like Jekyll & Hyde + [modern interpretation thereof]. They automatically provide something to talk about: a basic compare/contrast. Someone suggested Starship Troopers and The Forever War back in Literary, and I could be persuaded to try these. Other doable pairings: two different novelizations of Arthurian myth; Brave New World and 1984; two novels with unreliable narrators. Note how this only works with shorter books -- trying to read two 800-page novels in a month can only end badly.


Ginger - Jul 13, 2004 1:24:43 pm PDT #89 of 3301
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I suppose Henry Adams is not really beach reading; I have absolutely no perspective on the subject, since I love the book with an unreasoning adoration.


Gris - Jul 13, 2004 1:42:12 pm PDT #90 of 3301
Hey. New board.

How would new people enter?

I assume they would introduce themselves in the thread, and add their name to some list (probably kept off-board) from which new choosers are randomly chosen whenever necessary.

I also like the caveats mentioned. Here, then, is my total proposal for picking of new books.

A list of buffistas interested in participating - or, specifically, interested in picking books - will be kept somewhere (on the buffista webspace if possible, or somewhere else if necessary - I'll volunteer my personal computer for as long as I have a university connection if necessary). Each month, 3 months ahead of the opening of discussion, a member of the list will be randomly chosen from the list and approached to suggest a minimum of 2 and a maximum of 5 different books for their period, in-thread. After a bit of discussion, these books will be placed in a Mr. Poll, and the thread will choose the book for that recommendation period.

For the first three books, well, I don't know the best way to pick them. We could implement the scheme above immediately, but that would ignore all the fine suggestions we've already had. Or, we could just let Wolfram and Heather pick the first two books (as proposer and original idea-person, respectively) from the suggestions made, and let the third book be chosen by the above method as soon as the infrastructure gets implemented.

I would also like to see, perhaps in the same location as the "Interested suggestors" list, a list of book suggestions with mini-blurbs and pimping, for those who like that sort of thing. I like the pimps here, but will find them annoying once the discussion starts, and would prefer to have them off-thread (plus, then we can make them searchable and more easy to find, so they could be more useful for recs outside of the Book Club). This could be an invaluable resource for the person doing the picking, too.

My PHP skills are rusty, but I could probably implement something that's purely functional, given a couple of weeks. Somebody else on the board could probably do it much faster (email me and I can give you an account on my school machine, if we want to do it there.)

Discuss.


Wolfram - Jul 13, 2004 2:03:19 pm PDT #91 of 3301
Visilurking

I like the idea of paired books we read in tandem, like Jekyll & Hyde + [modern interpretation thereof]. They automatically provide something to talk about: a basic compare/contrast. Someone suggested Starship Troopers and The Forever War back in Literary, and I could be persuaded to try these. Other doable pairings: two different novelizations of Arthurian myth; Brave New World and 1984; two novels with unreliable narrators. Note how this only works with shorter books -- trying to read two 800-page novels in a month can only end badly.

This pairing idea excites me to the point of being unseemly.

Also, I think that we should have at least two books "in the hopper", so to speak, for upcoming months and this is why: I'm sure that for some books the discussion is going to be long and intense. I suspect that for others NSM. If we were all a book ahead it would allow us to truncate a dead discussion (say if the thread were quiet for more than a few days) and move on to the next book without having to wait for the month to be out.

And I like Nova's proposal.

Also, without naming names, there are several Buffistas who previously made their enthusiasm known for this thread and mentioned wanting to make recs, who we have yet to hear from. So how about we keep recs open until tommorrow evening, narrow them down (however we agree to do that) by Thursday evening, and we make the selections (however we agree to do that) on Friday?


Pix - Jul 13, 2004 2:17:32 pm PDT #92 of 3301
We're all getting played with, babe. -Weird Barbie

t popping into thread

t bouncing

I have many book suggestions, but I'll hold off this month.

I also wanted to x-post with my b'cracy post that once discussions actually start, I have a plethora of reading discussion techniques (not moderator stuff, just ways to get conversations going etc.) that I'd be glad to share. I promise not to get too English teacher if anyone takes me up on it.

Also wanted to pimp Reading Reminders by Jim Burke, not as a book club suggestion (it's nonfiction) but as a great set of suggestions to have active and engaged discussions about lit. The book is designed for English teachers, but it might be interesting to many of you.

I've never been in a book club per se (since I pretty much run five of them throughout the school year!), but I imagine many of the techniques I use in the classroom would be useful here as well.

Just to be clear, I am in no way trying to take over or tale charge or tell everyone that I know the "right way" to discuss books. I just wanted to offer up my experience FWIW.

t still bouncing!


Denise - Jul 13, 2004 2:37:23 pm PDT #93 of 3301

I've only posted here a few times, but I lurk. I'm very excited about the book club thread. I used to be an avid reader, but then life and two little ones happened, along with some time-consuming rl stuff, and reading got lost in the shuffle somewhere. I like having a deadline. It'll motivate me. I hope.


-t - Jul 13, 2004 2:41:21 pm PDT #94 of 3301
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

So how about we keep recs open until tommorrow evening, narrow them down (however we agree to do that) by Thursday evening, and we make the selections (however we agree to do that) on Friday?

Sure. I picked 2pm board time as about 24 hours after collecting recs for 24 hours was mentioned :-). I can shift it, no problem.

I've never done any sort of book club at all. I'm really looking forward to this.


Wolfram - Jul 13, 2004 2:45:26 pm PDT #95 of 3301
Visilurking

From Nutty:

The way that book clubs live is by finding books all or most of the members want to read all or most of the time.

While we're doing recs, just thought this could use another mention.