Tara: 'Your One-Stop Spot to Shop for Lots of New-Age and Occult Items.' Catchy. Giles: Think so? Tara: Uh huh. In a... hard to say sorta way.

'Sleeper'


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."


askye - Jul 04, 2011 4:03:56 pm PDT #15552 of 28293
Thrive to spite them

First book I remember crying while reading is A Lantern In Her Hand. And then Where the Red Fern Grows.


DebetEsse - Jul 04, 2011 4:04:40 pm PDT #15553 of 28293
Woe to the fucking wicked.

Gris, Angel. Doyle.


Scrappy - Jul 04, 2011 4:07:00 pm PDT #15554 of 28293
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

I remember as a kid, crying at the end of a book called Tom's Midnight Garden [link] But not because it was sad, just because i enjoyed it so much that I didn't want it to end.


Gris - Jul 04, 2011 4:18:24 pm PDT #15555 of 28293
Hey. New board.

Gris, Angel. Doyle.

Ah! Yes.

It was part of my tag once. I am ashamed.


Sue - Jul 04, 2011 4:26:11 pm PDT #15556 of 28293
hip deep in pie

More than Anne of Green Gables, I cried hard at the end of Pat and Emily series by LM Montgomery. I read the Pat series again when I was older and didn't love it as much, so I've stayed away from Emily of New Moon.


hippocampus - Jul 04, 2011 4:32:33 pm PDT #15557 of 28293
not your mom's socks.

Books make me sad, but more often, they'll make me angry on behalf of a character, or a group.

But I'm a sucker for visuals and injustice, and HKF recently caught me sniffling over a Little House on The Prairie episode HKF was watching. What? It was sad that Mary didn't take the test after she nearly burned down the barn. See also, Ever After.


Rayne - Jul 04, 2011 5:31:24 pm PDT #15558 of 28293
"Oh no! Has falling sky liquid once again caused you the sadness?" -Starfire

Don't feel bad, Gris. I couldn't immediately place it either.

Add me to those people who bawled at Where the Red Fern Grows and Charlotte's Web. I had the misfortune of deciding to read Where the Red Fern Grows on one of our family car trips across the country. I was in the back seat reading and sobbing. I went through a whole box of kleenex. My mom was so worried she made my dad pull over until I calmed down.

eta: Man, I just went to read a summary of WTRFG and now I'm sobbing like a baby AGAIN.


§ ita § - Jul 05, 2011 6:33:23 am PDT #15559 of 28293
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Sounder. Roots. Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry. Lord of The Rings. Hunger Games. Game of Thrones.

The slave trade (specifically the transatlantic one) makes me cry like a baby. Racism in the South makes me cry. The bit where the little guys stand up to fight makes me bawl.


DavidS - Jul 05, 2011 9:59:40 am PDT #15560 of 28293
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

I picked up the June 13/20 issue of The New Yorker and read through it while I got the oil changed at Luscious Garage.

Review: Absolutely heartbreaking story by Aleksander Hemon about his infant daughter's brain tumor. Read only if you wanted to be torn asunder or need to clear your tear ducts.

However, it also had The Russian Professor an excerpt from Nabokov's letters about his lecture tour that he undertook in the fall of '42 because a teaching job at Wesleyen didn't materialize. While I was reading it I kept thinking, "This is such a Preston Sturges movie. I wonder if the Coen Brothers could film this."

Because Nabokov isn't going to Yale or Duke, his tour is: Croker College in Hartsville, South Carolina, Spelman College in Atlanta, GA (a traditionally black women's college), Georgia State Womans College in Valdosta, a stopover in Springfield, Illinois and Macalaster College in St. Paul, MN.

He's taking trains and buses and forever being driven off to some field by some dotty old female botany professor so he can collect butterflies and he keeps having weirdly picaresque coincidental meetings ("...after lunch a Presbyterian minister, Smyth, turned up, a passionate butterfly collector and son of the famous lepidopterologist Smyth, about whom I know a lot (he worked on sphingids)."

Then he's being paired off to play tennis with some random professional woman in Atlanta, or giving lectures to all the young women of Spelman after daily church services and being mildly cranky and inconvenienced by missed connections and nervous barbers.

It's all so dry, with gentle, affectionate snark and oddly fish-out-of-water, but has a melancholy undercurrent as he's longing to write in Russian again.

Wes Anderson could do this movie too.


Polter-Cow - Jul 05, 2011 3:43:44 pm PDT #15561 of 28293
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

I finished Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, and, damn, that book takes like two hours to tie up all the loose ends, eh? Still, I dig that the Triwizard Tournament gives it a nice structure, and, while it may not have made much impact the first time I read it, I felt really bad about Cedric. He's such a decent person. Too bad "Kill the spare" is such a deliciously evil line I mouthed it along with Jim Dale. And on a second read, I am still anti-SPEW. You could remove SPEW from the book very easily. It's not plot-relevant at all, and it just makes Hermione annoying.

I'm 150 pages into Pretties, and, Jesus Christ, every third word is "bubbly," holy shit. But I like Tally now, and we've moved on to the inevitable revolution storyline that dystopian narratives lend themselves to (unless you're Orwell or Huxley). Also, I sort of envisioned the Specials as Agent Smiths, so it was kind of amusing when Dr. Cable basically said, "Human beings are a disease, and we are the cure."