I've never read Persuasion.
I still need to read The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, too, to complete my Bronte reading.
'Underneath'
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."
I've never read Persuasion.
I still need to read The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, too, to complete my Bronte reading.
Mansfield Park is the one that kind of blows.
I found it much more enjoyable once I learned that it was her playing with the conventions of gothic novels.
Have any of you seen the movie the Jane Austen Book Club. To my shame, I have seen that movie 2-3 times.
It does not get better with repeat viewings. It's like all the things that are absolutely improbable, stick out as even more so each time I see the film.
Ooh, how so, Pix?
There’s a bit of a longer article about it here, Liese: [link]
It still isn’t my favorite Austen (by far!), but I at least found it less annoying after learning that.
Mansfield Park is the one that kind of blows.
People either hate that one or think it is her most brilliant. There if very little in between.
I've read all the completed novels of Austen and love them all.
I found it much more enjoyable once I learned that it was her playing with the conventions of gothic novels.
Hmph. The heroine is spineless and the hero is a drip.
The heroine is spineless and the hero is a drip.
For a moment, I thought you were talking about Twilight.
total fucking spittake
Riveting, wonderful, funny at times, and gripping at others (The Long Winter is an amazing account of the killer winter of 1880-1881, and the chapter when Almanzo and Cap risk their lives to get enough wheat to feed the town and save it from starvation is edge-of-your-seat nailbitingly written).
I hated that scene. As I remember it (it's been a while), Almanzo and his brother had a whole lot of wheat stocked up to be seed for the next year. Almanzo was risking his life to save his next year's crop. Cap didn't know this -- Cap thought that there wasn't any wheat at all in town, and he thought he was risking his life to save the town. And Almanzo let Cap go along with him, even though he had to have known that Cap wouldn't have agreed to it if he knew that the Wilders had some wheat.