Lorne: Snakes? Uh-huh. And they came out of your what? Okay. Okay, well, did they get up there themselves or is this part of a, you know, a thing? No, I'm not judging...Do we fight snakes? Angel: Only if they're giant. Or demons. Or giant demons. Are they giant demon snakes? Lorne: Well, unless this guy's 30 feet tall, I'm thinking they're of the garden variety.

'Lineage'


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."


brenda m - Sep 28, 2010 4:13:56 pm PDT #12495 of 28319
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

Interesting. I tend to find short stories take more deliberate mental focus than a novel.


Toddson - Sep 28, 2010 5:46:45 pm PDT #12496 of 28319
Friends don't let friends read "Atlas Shrugged"

Well, I recently finished Blameless ... don't know if I'll follow the series any further. HOWEVER ... I'm wondering if Alexia or her child (after it's born, of course) will return Biffy to mortal so Lord Akeldama can make him into a vampire (I do like a happy ending!),


meara - Sep 28, 2010 8:14:21 pm PDT #12497 of 28319

My favorite is a well-paced trilogy. Quartets are acceptable as well. Almost any time a series goes longer than that (no matter how addicted I might get), I expect an unfortunate degradation in quality

YES. I was just reading the latest in a series I've quite enjoyed...and it's the 6th or 7th book, and I thought it was the last, and come to find out there's at LEAST two more planned, and I was really annoyed. Not only because I have to wait for more wrap up, but because, really? Dude? You can't say it all in SEVEN BOOKS? (Which are not short)?? But at least there does seem to be an end planned. Many series I read/have read just go on and on...and eventually (sometimes sooner [coughAnitaBlakecough] rather than later) just go downhill, and it makes me sad because I usually liked them so much to start with.

Though I don't tend to as much have that issue with mysteries, unless they get too caught up in the main character's personal life (like if suddenly after four or five books, there's no outside mystery, it's always that the serial killer wants the detective/forensic specialist/cop! This time Every time, it's PERSONAL!)


erin_obscure - Sep 28, 2010 8:38:59 pm PDT #12498 of 28319
Occasionally I’m callous and strange

ugh, i'm half way through _The Windup Girl_ and just got _Catching Fire_ from the library. I put a freeze on everything else i have on hold until i'm done with at least one...but such a condundrum...finish the one i'm halfway through (and totally able to put down) or jump ahead and read Catching Fire cuz i WANNA even though that means i might run out of time on Windup Girl...can't renew, there's other folks waiting. Oh, the first world woe!


Polter-Cow - Sep 28, 2010 9:20:09 pm PDT #12499 of 28319
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Well, I recently finished Blameless ... don't know if I'll follow the series any further.

I finished it last night myself. I enjoyed it, and it made me laugh out loud at points, of course, but it felt...like not as much was at stake as usual. I never felt a real sense of danger, perhaps because Alexia is so gosh-darn unflappable. That's part of the lighthearted, romp-y tone of the books, I suppose, which has its charm, but it seems like very little HAPPENS in each book. There are basically one or two revelations or developments that move the plot forward (and I do like that Carriger is moving a continuing plot, of sorts, regarding Alexia's preternatural nature through the books and like the references to past books), but otherwise it's just silly fun, which is fine.

I did like that secondary characters like Lyall and Floote got a chance to shine (and, like Steph, I really want to know what the HELL is/was up with Floote: it seems to be implied that he was a sundowner...or maybe a Templar, but I've forgotten what he's done in previous books). Also, I got unexpectedly teary at Lyall's reaction to Biffy's sadness at the realization that he'd become a werewolf.

I'm interested to see what Carriger is planning for the next two books, which I believe are supposed to close out the series.


Laga - Sep 28, 2010 9:30:06 pm PDT #12500 of 28319
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

hum, I guess I'm done with Bon Temps (for now at least). I've picked up a Christopher Moore book.


Rayne - Sep 28, 2010 10:15:11 pm PDT #12501 of 28319
"Oh no! Has falling sky liquid once again caused you the sadness?" -Starfire

I started losing my love for Bon Temps starting with Book 7 (where they're all staying at the hotel in Rhodes). There are still glimpses of good stuff, but I'm just getting more and more frustrated with the author and Sookie. I'm starting book 10 tonight, and I really shouldn't be feeling relieved that I'll be temporarily done with the series.

It's a toss up whether I'll start the Soulless series, The Strain series or Game of Thrones series next. I considered getting that Reapers book that Gris mentioned upthread, but paying $10 for a 250ish page book isn't sitting well with me right now.

Or maybe I'll take a reading break and play the latest Professor Layton game!


Atropa - Sep 28, 2010 10:20:39 pm PDT #12502 of 28319
The artist formerly associated with cupcakes.

Re Blameless: my theory is that Floote was a Templar, and had a change of heart. From what I remember in the previous books, he's not *thrilled* with supernaturals, but he's very, very uneasy about Templars.

Also, I got unexpectedly teary at Lyall's reaction

Yes. That got me, as did the realization that Lord Akeldema and Biffy really did, and still do, care for each other.

The plot point I'm most excited about for the future books is Lord Akeldema, Potentate! Whoo, that is going to be fun.


Gris - Sep 29, 2010 2:45:58 am PDT #12503 of 28319
Hey. New board.

I considered getting that Reapers book that Gris mentioned upthread, but paying $10 for a 250ish page book isn't sitting well with me right now.

Unfortunately, I doubt it will ever be much cheaper (except used, I suppose) as it's not really being marketed as a genre book - it's literary fiction that happens to take place in a post-apocalyptic world with zombies - and so will likely never get the mass market paperback treatment.

On that note - I just read Hyperion and Fall of Hyperion in mass market paperback form and the contrast in readability between them and my more common Kindle reading was stark. When dealing with a long book like that the teeny mass market paperbacks are so annoying! Incredibly thin paper, tiny print, hard to hold in one hand (especially near the beginning and end, when the weight is unbalanced), ink that rubs off on your fingers - wow. In fact, I read Catching Fire and Mockingjay in hardcover from the library, and kind of hated those too - so heavy and REALLY impossible to hold in one hand! I used to be one of the people who said "Oh, but I will miss the feel / smell / look of real books if I switch to eBooks" but I have to say... I don't. I mean, i like having books on my shelf, and will always buy some books I really like in hardcover or nice paperback form for that reason, but I'd rather READ any of them, these days, in Kindle format.


Steph L. - Sep 29, 2010 3:36:57 am PDT #12504 of 28319
I look more rad than Lutheranism

In fact, I read Catching Fire and Mockingjay in hardcover from the library, and kind of hated those too - so heavy and REALLY impossible to hold in one hand!

Imagine the day when books and other media are just beamed directly into our brains -- the Kindle, et al., will seem positively unwieldy!!