An Agatha Christie list for Corwood à la Netflix:
If you like René Clair, you'll love
And Then There Were None
If you like
The 39 Steps,
you'll love
N or M?
If you like
The Hound of the Baskervilles,
you'll love
Murder at Hazelmoor
If you like
Citizen Kane,
you'll love
Why Didn't They Ask Evans?
If you like
The Lady Vanishes,
you'll love
What Mrs. McGillicuddy Saw!
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."
What Mrs. McGillicuddy Saw!
Oh, that's another of my favorite Miss Marples.
I seriously wanted to be either Miss Marple or Jessica Fletcher when I was younger. (I sort of still do).
I wanted to be Samantha Stevens (and still sort of do) but that's a discussion for another thread.
Even within an English degree its easy enough to chart a tight course and land where you prefer.
Yep! I was able to avoid most American Lit and tried to avoid as much poetry as possible, but couldn't in the Elizabethan and Victorian lit classes.
Kind of weird that Daughter of Time is shelved with Red Harvest
Seriously? I keep my copy of Daughter of Time with my (few) mysteries, next to my copy of Colin Dexter's The Wench Is Dead, a neat follow-up to DoT.
Even within an English degree its easy enough to chart a tight course and land where you prefer.
True. I mostly studied plays, which are limited by the tolerances of the audience's tushes.
Kind of weird that Daughter of Time is shelved with Red Harvest but then science fiction and fantasy are conflated in odd ways.
If you think about it, organizing fiction by genre is a bit like organizing an art gallery based on color. It can be done, obviously, and at least that way you have a hope of finding something you're looking for, but it's so arbitrary that it doesn't really tell you anything useful about an individual items.
but it's so arbitrary that it doesn't really tell you anything useful about an individual items.
True dat. I think most Elmore Leonard fans would enjoy Neuromancer (which Gibson modeled on Leonard's plots), so it even defeats the marketing angle.
I actually do prefer shelving everything together. It's a pain trying to figure out whether they're shelving Iain Banks in Fiction or Science Fiction.
The reason we went with an alphabetical format in our Lost in the Grooves book was to purposefully arrange records next to each other from a variety of genres.
It's a pain trying to figure out whether they're shelving Iain Banks in Fiction or Science Fiction.
His SciFi books usually come under Iain M Banks.
His SciFi books usually come under Iain M Banks.
Right and some bookstores shelve them separately. But some don't!