I skim at work. I apologise for the oversight.
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."
Interesting move by Amazon. I wonder if this will lead to less expensive e-books. Seems like it should.
Amazon Unveils 70 Percent Kindle Royalty Plan
I can't recall if anyone else has read Octavia Butler, but I know ita has... So.
I read "Parable of the Talents" last night.
Is it just me, or is the ending one hot, tasked-on mess? It's like, two books of detail and world-building and character-building, and then 3 pages of "...and in the next 40 years, all the shit that I've been building up to happened. Then she died. Kthxbye!"
It was...an incredible letdown. She does all this thought different POV, enough that towards the last 20 pages,I thought "Oh, there must be a third book to deal with all of the stuff that's been building up in this book, with the daughter and Olamina and the uncle."
And then, 3 pages of...non-resolution.
TACKED. ON.
I was very disappointed.
Erin, I think she had originally intended to do a third, Parable of the Trickster. She's mentioned it in some interviews even. Not that it makes the letdown any less jarring.
I don't remember a letdown like that. I should reread it anyway.
please do, cause I was confuzzled by it.
Thanks to IO9's pointing it out and Jessica's enthusiastic endorsement I am now reading Charles Stoss' Glasshouse.
I'm just getting started but it's (a) fascinating; (b) has a lot of resonance with Dollhouse (so far).
Thanks, Jess!
Dang, i just searched my library catalogue for _Soulless_ and there is but one title hit, which is about Anne Coulter. Ouch. Do not want.
Erin, i felt the same way about the ending of that book. She really should have written the third book.
I read Glasshouse also, thanks to io9 and the library. I was all "science fiction and genderfuck, how could I not love it?" and parts of it I did, but other parts I more just wanted to smack the characters for being dumbasses.
I just lent my copy of "Parable of the Sower" to a junior college student next door. I eagerly await his thoughts about it all, because... I really cannot remember anything about the plot. Isn't that sad? All my other OEB books, yes: little bits of memory cling to their covers and remind me what I found between them. I so look forward to talking with anyone who's read some Butler.
I thought her last book would have been better if she'd lived long enough to do one last polishing of her prose, but the publisher released what she'd written anyway.