Glory: Lesson number one, Vampires equal impure! Spike: Damn right I'm impure, I'm as impure as the driven yellow snow!

'Dirty Girls'


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."


megan walker - Aug 22, 2010 2:55:09 pm PDT #12174 of 28333
"What kind of magical sunshine and lollipop world do you live in? Because you need to be medicated."-SFist

So, I went to the library to get my book for our third book salon topic (Russian Roulette). War and Peace is an even bigger doorstop than Don Quixote.


Sparky1 - Aug 23, 2010 3:44:59 am PDT #12175 of 28333
Librarian Warlord

My copy of Mockingjay has shipped.

::ponders the wisdom of calling in sick the first week of classes to read::


sumi - Aug 23, 2010 4:47:38 am PDT #12176 of 28333
Art Crawl!!!

Mine too!!


Ouise - Aug 23, 2010 4:56:49 am PDT #12177 of 28333
Socks are a running theme throughout the series. They are used as symbols of freedom, redemption and love.

I was all about Greek when I was in school

Me too! I am the reason my whole family can sing the Greek alphabet (it totally works with the alphabet song - the extra syllables make up for fewer letters).

My (then five-year-old) brother made up the adapted ending:

Now I know my alpha beta gamma
Next time won't you come riding on a llama?


meara - Aug 23, 2010 5:05:09 am PDT #12178 of 28333

Hah--in intro languages class in 7th grade we learned a different alphabet song for the Greek alphabet. I can still sing it but I suspect I grt one or two o the letters wrong. It's a fun song though.


Volans - Aug 23, 2010 5:18:02 am PDT #12179 of 28333
move out and draw fire

Mal had a Fischer-Price toy we got in Greece, one of those "cellphones" that speak numbers and letters and shapes, and to my surprise when it sang the whole alphabet, it did it to the tune of the American/English alphabet song.


Steph L. - Aug 23, 2010 5:53:09 am PDT #12180 of 28333
this mess was yours / now your mess is mine

I learned the Greek alphabet because my freshman year roommate joined a sorority and she had to learn the Greek alphabet to some cutesy song. For some reason, it stuck in my head. (I also still have my high school fight song up there, too. Go figure.)


flea - Aug 23, 2010 9:46:10 am PDT #12181 of 28333
information libertarian

Kindle owners - may I ask some questions? We are envisioning a project where we supply students with Kindles. I know one can read converted .pdf files on a Kindle - right? As for books in copyright - suppose a class had to buy & read Twilight on their university-supplied Kindles. After student A turns the Kindle back in to the university, does she still have access to Twilight through her account at Amazon, and could she download it onto another device? Would the copy of Twilight still be on the Kindle she returned to the university? Um, I guess what I'm asking is, are books tied to the user's Amazon account, or to the device? Or some combination of both?

What about iBooks? Same sitch, or different?


Deena - Aug 23, 2010 9:50:44 am PDT #12182 of 28333
How are you me? You need to stop that. Only I can be me. ~Kara

flea, they're still in the users account, and could be downloaded to a PC (with the relatively new Kindle reader for desktops) if they don't own a Kindle. If they have a kindle, it has to be associated with their account. For the loaner kindle, you'd have to remind them to un-associate it when they returned it.

You can read PDF, kindle format, or non-DRM mobipocket format on a Kindle.

According to Apple: "iBooks supports the industry-leading ePub digital book file type. You can sync freely available ePub files to iBooks using iTunes, or download ePub files from the iBookstore. iBooks also supports syncing and viewing PDFs. Other digital book file types are not supported at this time." I'm fairly sure you can't read library books with iBooks, at least through Overdrive since it requires Adobe Digital Editions.

On the Barnes & Noble Nook you can read library books through Adobe Digital Editions, which supports PDF and ePUB as well as the proprietary Nook format.

(eta more information)


sumi - Aug 24, 2010 6:54:40 am PDT #12183 of 28333
Art Crawl!!!

My copy of Mockingjay is "out for delivery" - fingers crossed that they leave it at the door rather than waiting for a signature!