Time for some thrilling heroics.

Jayne ,'The Train Job'


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."


Polter-Cow - Aug 18, 2010 9:40:23 am PDT #12000 of 28342
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Yeah, I'm at a point where I have so many books I haven't read that I want to read that re-reading seems like time better spent reading something new. That doesn't stop me from wanting to re-read a bunch of Christopher Pike books soon. At least they won't take long.


Liese S. - Aug 18, 2010 9:43:11 am PDT #12001 of 28342
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

Oh, I reread like mad. Pratchett stands up best to this.

And right, Aims. I also have trouble rereading after the death of the author. Like, I just now started rereading L'Engle for the first time since her death in 2007.


Amy - Aug 18, 2010 9:43:51 am PDT #12002 of 28342
Because books.

I'm with you, P-C. I have so much to be read, I've disallowed rereading unless it's a really, really bad day and I need an hour curled up with Sara Crewe or the March sisters or, oddly, Sylvia Plath's letters to her mother.


Steph L. - Aug 18, 2010 9:51:35 am PDT #12003 of 28342
this mess was yours / now your mess is mine

I have so much to be read, I've disallowed rereading

If I want to re-read something, my brain will generally not latch on to something new. I can't work up any interest in something new that I previously really wanted to read, *if* I'm currently wanting to re-read something. I can't explain it. My brain wants what it wants.


Dana - Aug 18, 2010 9:55:14 am PDT #12004 of 28342
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

I can't read new stuff at night. It keeps me up too late.


erikaj - Aug 18, 2010 9:58:40 am PDT #12005 of 28342
Always Anti-fascist!

I plan to buy that Thurber collection(because we asked for it.) to read at night. Of course, some of them won't be as good without the voices and whatnot.


Amy - Aug 18, 2010 9:59:31 am PDT #12006 of 28342
Because books.

If I want to re-read something, my brain will generally not latch on to something new.

When this happens to me, which it does, and has been often lately, it's because I'm stressed and distracted, and then half the time I wind up tooling aimlessly around the interwebs instead and reading crappy fanfic.


Steph L. - Aug 18, 2010 10:04:59 am PDT #12007 of 28342
this mess was yours / now your mess is mine

I plan to buy that Thurber collection

Oh, god. Adventures in surreality: the day Tim's mom died, I took off work and went over to his parents' house. Because she died so early in the day, the funeral home came to pick up her body early, hospice came to pick up the bed and equipment early, and we had all the furniture back the way it always was by 11 a.m.

There is a Thurber connection here.

So by 2 p.m., the funeral director guy came over to the house to plan shit, and of course the whole family wanted to be in on the discussion. So I took the house phone, as well as everyone's cell phones, into the den to intercept calls so the meeting could happen without interruption.

I needed something to distract me, and there on a shelf was a Thurber book. I disremember the title right now. I read a good chunk of it before the meeting was over.

But the thing is, now b/c of the connection with that day, I have no desire to read any more Thurber. Sadface.


erikaj - Aug 18, 2010 10:15:16 am PDT #12008 of 28342
Always Anti-fascist!

Well, I hope you want to, sometime. But I can see why you wouldn't. After my stepdad left us, the Simpsons made me too sad. It was so Our Thing. And there still are a few where the pleasure is kind of muted.


Ginger - Aug 18, 2010 11:07:52 am PDT #12009 of 28342
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

C.S. Lewis wrote that there are some books that we read breathlessly the first time, because the story is so compelling that we need to know what happened. Once you know what happened, you can read the book again to appreciate the writing and the characters. A great book can be read many times and each time the reader will get something new from it.

I tend to reread when I'm under stress, but I also frequently reread a whole series when a new book comes out. (I'm currently contemplating a Miles reread before the new Bujold.)

I've probably read Little Women, Eight Cousins and An Old-Fashioned Girl 20 times.