"Who Am I This Time?" by Vonnegut.
Wasn't that made into a movie with Susan Sarandon and Christopher Walker? They had that in the sell pile at Le Video.
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."
"Who Am I This Time?" by Vonnegut.
Wasn't that made into a movie with Susan Sarandon and Christopher Walker? They had that in the sell pile at Le Video.
Wasn't that made into a movie with Susan Sarandon and Christopher Walker?
Yes. Kathy A. gave me a copy that I have shown to some of my classes. It's pretty good.
Yes. Kathy A. gave me a copy that I have shown to some of my classes. It's pretty good.
I guess I should snap it up. It's only 99 cents.
It's good to still have a VCR.
I love that movie (btw, it was directed by Jonathan Demme), and urge everyone to see it if they haven't already. It's wonderful seeing a very young Walken playing a romantic comedy lead, albeit a very quirky one. I love all the plays that they manage to reference (Cyrano De Bergerac, Streetcar Named Desire, Romeo and Juliet, and Importance of Being Earnest).
One of the things I like about Victorian novels is the way they can just kind of meander in a way that still keeps your attention.
FredPete, have you read any Sarah Waters? Her books aren't Dickens-long, but they are substantial, and they are Victorian settings (except for her last 2), and focus on the lesbian culture then, with a great honking dose of gothic (Affinity, I think my fave) and crime (Fingersmith). Just really fabulous.
I also quite liked The Observations, which is more Gothic Victorian-settings, with quite a strong lesbian (quasi) subtext.
Also Slammerkin by Emma Donoghue was really good, although it was 18th c. rather than Victorian.
Mmm. Historical fiction.
Also Slammerkin by Emma Donoghue was really good, although it was 18th c. rather than Victorian.
Oh! Loved that book and her short stories too. I was trying to remember the title when she was interviewed on NPR yesterday about her new novel, which I really want to read.
Room? I want to read that. I haven't read the short stories, but her book on female relationships in fiction is at my lib, and it's on my list. I also read a story she did about whathername, female sculptor in England, Damer?
I read it following the bio on Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, and it was really interesting, although I didn't enjot it as much as Slammerkin.
I was just thinking about this yesterday! Time and again, if I'm reading a long series, I start getting disappointed after 5-6 books in (Sookie, Hollows, Pern). So I guess I prefer trilogies, or well planned out series (where the author actually has a definitive end in mind).
I love a good short story, but I have to be in the mood. Otherwise a novel is what I generally read. And anything that continues into a series is usually welcome, but some mystery series do have the same-old feeling after a while.
Unsurprisingly, I am Amy. In college, as a Lit and Theatre major, all I could read for "entertainment" was short stories-- Stephan King, Agathie Christie, and Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, though, because that was all I had the attention span for with all that academic reading.
Interesting. I tend to find short stories take more deliberate mental focus than a novel.