The next time you decide to stab me in the back... have the guts to do it to my face.

Mal ,'Ariel'


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."


Consuela - Dec 20, 2010 6:50:52 pm PST #13298 of 28281
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

Dana, you can load fic on it! (I hear: I don't know how, myself.)


Cass - Dec 20, 2010 6:53:37 pm PST #13299 of 28281
Bob's learned to live with tragedy, but he knows that this tragedy is one that won't ever leave him or get better.

Oh, you can. Trust me.


Dana - Dec 21, 2010 6:56:37 am PST #13300 of 28281
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

That is definitely the plan. One of the plans.


Ginger - Dec 21, 2010 7:01:55 am PST #13301 of 28281
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I wish to note this horror publicly: Someone has written in the library book I'm reading. The only mitigating factor is that it's in pencil, but I feel like reading with an eraser in hand.


Beverly - Dec 21, 2010 9:11:58 am PST #13302 of 28281
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

Oh now see, for me that's always interesting, given that the previous reader had something perceptive to say.

We had a favorite used book store in a university town, and one weekend when we were in, a notable faculty member's estate had just cleared. He left all his "formal" library to the school's library. His working library wound up at the used books. Poetry and short stories and novels--all the standdard English and American writers, some translations from German and Russian. And in every volume there was highlighted text, margin notes in tiny script, sometimes wrapping around the block of print from a side margin up to the header or down to the footer. As most of the material was fairly familiar, the notes were far more interesting than the text--and gave new insights and perspectives. Fascinating.

A note scribbled in pencil, though, "This sux!" is perhaps not as thrilling.


Connie Neil - Dec 21, 2010 9:40:22 am PST #13303 of 28281
brillig

I've seen where "helpful" people have put in notes saying "Don't read this part!" before a sex scene--or simply got out a marker and crossed out the offending passage. And then they blithely return the book, probably filled with satisfaction at having improved the world.


megan walker - Dec 21, 2010 9:49:16 am PST #13304 of 28281
"What kind of magical sunshine and lollipop world do you live in? Because you need to be medicated."-SFist

My favorite was reading a "Jane Austen" mystery from the library where someone had scribbled "Jane Austen is probably turning in her grave!" I agreed with the sentiment since I really didn't like Jane Austen as detective, but thought that Jane would probably hate someone writing in library books more.


Beverly - Dec 21, 2010 9:51:53 am PST #13305 of 28281
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

Well, yeah, library books. I somehow missed that part of the "writing in books" complaint. A burning offense, for sure, with a publicly-owned book.


flea - Dec 21, 2010 10:35:26 am PST #13306 of 28281
information libertarian

So, I get a Kindle for a work project, through May at least, and it arrived today! Hit me with your top 10 Kindle tips. This is the wifi-only, cheap-ass one - I am working with an English professor and he is going to have all the texts for his class on the Kindle, and every student gets one (on loan).


javachik - Dec 21, 2010 10:41:18 am PST #13307 of 28281
Our wings are not tired.

I don't have any tips. I just read read read read. I can't explain the phenomena of why books sat gathering dust on my nightstand, but I tear through them on the Kindle.