Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Hee. I already asked Joe about it and he told me a little bit. He tried to equate it to
Animal Farm
to which I responded, "I never read
Animal Farm
." He said, "Ok, you saw the TNT movie a couple of years ago." I thought about it and said, "I remember there were pigs."
He just sighed and went back inside.
Hee. I already asked Joe about it and he told me a little bit. He tried to equate it to Animal Farm to which I responded, "I never read Animal Farm ." He said, "Ok, you saw the TNT movie a couple of years ago." I thought about it and said, "I remember there were pigs."
Hmm, I'd say it's more like LORD OF THE RINGS, but with rabbits.
Frank, I thought that, too. I think Joe was thinking more about the social commentary.
Hmm, I'd say it's more like LORD OF THE RINGS, but with rabbits.
It's kind of like
Lost,
but with rabbits.
I'm 150 pages into
Kavalier and Clay,
and I don't even
have
slash goggles, but I feel like Chabon is fucking with me on purpose. As for the story, it started out a little slow, but it's really taken off now that they've finally started work on the comic.
I think Joe was thinking more about the social commentary.
Hmmm. I didn't really pick up a lot of social commentary or allegory. Granted I read it in high school, but I'd also read ANIMAL FARM (heh - type HOUSE at first; definitely not the same) by then. Of course, missing the social commentary in ANIMAL FARM is like missing a shovel to the face. I didn't even know a whole lot about Lenin/Stalin/Trotsky at the time I read it, but I couldn't miss it was MAKING A POLITICAL STATEMENT about something related to dictators.
I didn't really pick up a lot of social commentary or allegory. Granted I read it in high school
I read it in ninth grade, and I don't know whether I "picked up" on the social commentary, but I did understand that it wasn't just a story about rabbits. If it was making comments on specific things, I'm sure I didn't make the connection, but I do recall appreciating it for
being
social commentary, with bunnies.
I'm 150 pages into Kavalier and Clay, and I don't even have slash goggles, but I feel like Chabon is fucking with me on purpose.
Or possibly it's a universe where some characters are just gay. That happens in novels sometimes. Hint.
I liked the slow parts, when I read that book. It eased me into the story in a way that worked for me -- gave me parameters for how it would work, how the characters would brush up against fame and famous events and fit into the real world as I know it. Creating that space slowly helped me understand that this was not going to be a fictionalized history of real events, but a riff on reality. Not a substitution, but an addition.
I remember there were pigs. In pants.
It's funny cause in one of my classes we're talking about critical reading vs casual reading. And it occured to me that I don't do critical reading. If it's reading for school, I gloss over it. With the exception of Harry Potter, when I read casually, I read and enjoy it and then I'm done. I sometimes take something away, but mostly I think, "I liked that." or "That was crap." So, I often miss the deeper message.
Or possibly it's a universe where some characters are just gay. That happens in novels sometimes. Hint.
But they're cousins! Wait, that doesn't stop people either. Cool, then.
I liked the slow parts, when I read that book. It eased me into the story in a way that worked for me -- gave me parameters for how it would work, how the characters would brush up against fame and famous events and fit into the real world as I know it. Creating that space slowly helped me understand that this was not going to be a fictionalized history of real events, but a riff on reality.
I'm not sure I understand your distinction there, but I guess I haven't gotten far enough. I was a little confused about the whole
Golem
thing because it was talked about as if it were
very, very real in its supernatural abilities.
The slow parts are fine, really, because of the storytelling. I feel like Chabon's sitting there relating this long-ass story to me, and every now and then he says, "This is a digression. But it's important, so bear with me. I'll make it worth your while." The language and style is so colorful.