Angel: Connor, this is Spike and Illyria. Guys, this is Connor. Connor: Hi. umm...I like your outfit. Illyria: Your body warms. This one is lusting after me. Connor: Oh...no, I--I--it's just that it's the outfit. I guess I've had a thing for older women. Angel: They were supposed to fix that.

'Origin'


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."


sj - Nov 08, 2006 10:12:54 am PST #1495 of 28156
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

Ha! That's like me and editions of Dracula. (I haven't picked up the new edition that's illustrated by Jae Lee, because I wasn't *that* in love with the art. Of course, if a remaindered copy turns up at the local Half-Price Books, I may change my mind ...)

My worst is Middlemarch. Everytime I see a pretty, old edition, I have to have it. Plus, I have about 3 paperback copies.


JZ - Nov 08, 2006 10:14:03 am PST #1496 of 28156
See? I gave everybody here an opportunity to tell me what a bad person I am and nobody did, because I fuckin' rule.

Yay Jilli! I'm in the middle of re-re-re-reading Jane Eyre right now (illustrated by Fritz Eichenberg; sadly, none of his Eyre illustrations are Googleable), and loving it (first read it at 10, the age Jane is when it opens, and I still think of Jane as one of my oldest friends). In my current reading, Mr. Rochester has just been rescued from a suspicious fire in his bedroom. Can't wait for... well, everything that comes after. All of it.

It's very, very different from Wuthering Heights (Charlotte and Emily were, after all, rather different writers and different persons, or at least as different as two extremely close siblings in a self-contained family in an isolated region of a small country can be).


Kathy A - Nov 08, 2006 10:31:05 am PST #1497 of 28156
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

If you end up liking Jane Eyre, Jilli, read The Eyre Affair after that. Very fun book on its own, but it adds a lot to have read JE, or at least be familiar with it.

My "want to smack the lead character upside the head for being a dolt" book is Tess of the D'Ubervilles. I literally threw the book across my dorm room in disgust with her when I had to read it for my Victorian Lit class.


lisah - Nov 08, 2006 10:36:37 am PST #1498 of 28156
Punishingly Intricate

I admit, it was Dame Darcy's art that sold me on it. She's so deliciously loopy and over-the-top Gothic Victorian.

Dame Darcy was just in town reading at my friends' store where I work on the weekends. You might be interested one of these lovelies from her that they are selling at their new art toy store (and also online of course):

[link]


Polter-Cow - Nov 08, 2006 10:37:00 am PST #1499 of 28156
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

If you end up liking Jane Eyre, Jilli, read The Eyre Affair after that. Very fun book on its own, but it adds a lot to have read JE, or at least be familiar with it.

I agree that it definitely adds to have read JE, although I was disappointed by the book as a whole. There were some clever bits, but the writing bothered me. I may have wanted to scream when we got an entire chapter about events Thursday DID NOT WITNESS and every time Thursday told us what OTHER CHARACTERS WERE THINKING. If you're going to do first-person, Fforde, do first-person. Don't cheat. It also bugged me that the Eyre stuff didn't happen for, like, 200 pages.


shrift - Nov 08, 2006 10:41:22 am PST #1500 of 28156
"You can't put a price on the joy of not giving a shit." -Zenkitty

I haven't read The Eyre Affair. Only Wide Sargasso Sea.


Sophia Brooks - Nov 08, 2006 10:41:33 am PST #1501 of 28156
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

I always list Jane Eyre as my favorite book ever.

Also, JZ is me WRT

first read it at 10, the age Jane is when it opens, and I still think of Jane as one of my oldest friends.


Polter-Cow - Nov 08, 2006 10:47:02 am PST #1502 of 28156
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

I read JE three times because it was the Academic Decathlon book. Thus, I gained a certain affection for it, but I don't think I would really love it on its own merits.


brenda m - Nov 08, 2006 10:47:04 am PST #1503 of 28156
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

Wide Sargasso Sea is excellent. I didn't like The Eyre Affair (in part for the reasons PC mentions), though I agree that without JE first, it would be even less comprehensible.


Polter-Cow - Nov 08, 2006 10:49:02 am PST #1504 of 28156
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

though I agree that without JE first, it would be even less comprehensible.

I hadn't read JE since high school (the aforementioned three times), so I was really, really confused about what appeared to be the ending of JE in the world of TEA for most of the book, because I thought I had misremembered what actually happened in JE. I did think it was very, very clever for the events of the book to actually end up creating the ending we know now.