Although there's still a lot of stuff that's never made it to CD.
Yeah, but most of that has been digitally ripped and posted on a music blog somewhere. I've found some incredibly rare vinyl items online.
But I concur, there are things I miss about that shared experience of going to a rare showing on a big screen, or even indulging in the grey market (which is what I did to catch up with Buffy before the full seasons came out).
Which is weird to think of about BtVS because it seems to have a syndication life sort of like MASH once did. It cycled through multiple times on FX and now its on Logo.
David, shouldn't that quote go in GWW, too?
I was SO let down that "On Writing" sucked.
Not in my opinion, at all.
David, shouldn't that quote go in GWW, too?
Sure! I like the quote particularly because he talks about the common currency of talent. "Common as table salt." Which jibes somewhat with what I've observed. Certainly my writing class in college had a lot of very talented writers and it didn't take long to realize that not all of them were going to be published and have careers.
It's very hard to stick to a writer's carer. It's a long time to learn and you don't make much while you're learning.
Not in my opinion, at all.
Well I hated it, but I am glad you liked it.
It's very hard to stick to a writer's carer. It's a long time to learn and you don't make much while you're learning.
Which is why I thought it belonged in GWW.
I rather like On Writing as well, but it was as much for the biographical sections as the ones about writing. I did really like him showing the various drafts of the first few pages of a short story, and why he made the changes that he made.
But I'm hardly objective when it comes to Stephen King - he was a college friend of a couple of my sisters (and my brother-in-law), he grew up in a town next to the one where I grew up (that basically had a post office, a meeting house, gas station and a general store delineating the town as such), and I've met him a few times.
As I remember, not so different from what she said when she ended the series. Leaving the Potterverse for a while, not necessarily forever. I would be curious to see what she would do in a different universe (fantasy or not, genre or not) . Even if she ultimately writes more in that universe, I suspect she will do better if she writes at least a novel (or a novel's worth of short works) outside it before returning.
I'd much rather she did something new, or at the very least something different in the same 'verse.
I'm not objective at all about King. He was my first writer crush. Steve has a copy of On Writing, I'll try it again. I bought it at the airport when it came out, read about 80 pages on the plane and disliked it so much that I left it on the plane for the next person. I'm willing to try it again.