It seems like opening this thread for a specified period of time for non-white font HP discussion would be a nice gesture, but I have no strong feelings about it. I have read it, and would be happy to join the discussion, at least as a lurker.
What kind of details do you think we need to work out, Wolfram? (I'm not arguing about it; this is a serious question.) I come up with book, formatting book, discussion guide (buffista created or cribbed from elsewhere). Perhaps we also should discuss whether or not the book chooser and discussion guide provider should act as some sort of moderator, bringing up points or throwing out questions when it appears that the discussion is lagging. Any thoughts?
What kind of details do you think we need to work out, Wolfram?
Exactly what you're talking about. Making the Gutenberg idea, which sounds great in theory, work in practice. Is there someone with the technical know-how to format and link the book for download? (Assuming people see the plain text format as a barrier.) Creating a discussion guide, and having a guide provider, whether the book chooser or otherwise, lead and stimulate discussion. Talking about the length of discussion periods, and what was turning people off (and on) in the first round of book club.
For example, there were some postings upthread which might be helpful, like Hec's pointing out that we like discussing character motives and actions:
DavidS "The Buffista Book Club: Isn't the Point of Computers to Replace Books?" Dec 16, 2004 2:38:54 pm PST
Or Lcat's suggestions about changing up genres and a designated guide:
lcat "The Buffista Book Club: Isn't the Point of Computers to Replace Books?" Mar 17, 2005 7:46:18 am PST
And there were similar suggestions made by folks like Connie, Amyliz, Cindy, Brenda M, Stephanie, Heather and others.
And I'd love to do a graphic novel and recruit those fine experienced minds from Jossverse to help us analyze. (But that's selfishly because I've recently read some amazing works in that style and I think some could sustain extended discussion.)
Anyway, if we're going to give it a final go, I think it might be worth taking a little time to tweak the things that weren't working and focus on the things that were.
I suspect Fay's suggestion about a threaded book conversation by chapter is probably what works best online. Which may account for why our unthreaded board is less suitable for a book club. It's all or nothing. You can't read the first chapter and discuss it. You can't get drawn in by seeing what other people are discussing in the first chapter.
I think Gutenberg would be a fine experiment, but I personally wouldn't want to read a book online. I have to stare at a computer all day. Readnig a book is a different kind of eyestrain.
I'd like to open it to HBP discussion because I think that would probably work here since so many people have already read it.
How would a HBP discussion here be different than what's been going on in Literary in whitefont?
I think it would be the same, only no whitefont necessary.
I suspect Fay's suggestion about a threaded book conversation by chapter is probably what works best online. Which may account for why our unthreaded board is less suitable for a book club. It's all or nothing. You can't read the first chapter and discuss it. You can't get drawn in by seeing what other people are discussing in the first chapter.
I can see advantages to threaded discussions, but we've been able to have lengthy discussions on every other sort of medium from music to movies to television, and on numerous topics that lend themselves to divergence like politics, religion, and what lunch was. And Literary (and Jossverse) already sustain unthreaded literary discussions. I think you were more on the money with the choice of our selections than the forum where we discuss them.
I think Gutenberg would be a fine experiment, but I personally wouldn't want to read a book online. I have to stare at a computer all day. Readnig a book is a different kind of eyestrain.
I think you've confused the delivery system with the product. Gutenberg is a way for people who may not have the book or the time or patience to procure the book to get it in a convenient manner. Whatever classic(s) we end up selecting may already be on your bookshelf.
I'm easily confused.
Then my work here is done.
He IS a lawyer after all.
t idle
Having recently read
V for Vendetta
and
Watchmen
for the first time, I'd rather enjoy the chance to discuss them at length in the same way that I did HBP. But, that said, I think your Guttenberg suggestion seems fair, if I'm right in undersanding it to be one of the online archives of classics?
...sorry, I shouldn't be interjecting at all, really, as I'm fairly unlikely to participate. Nothing to see here.