Ouhh! Snacks! The secret to any successful migration! Who's up for some tasty fried meat products!?

Anya ,'Touched'


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 15, 2006 9:15:56 pm PST #1696 of 28160
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

Dana, my eyes, my eyes! You suck!

The Count is by far the most interesting character in that novel.


IAmNotReallyASpring - Dec 16, 2006 12:05:47 am PST #1697 of 28160
I think Freddy Quimby should walk out of here a free hotel

Stendahl's "The Red and the Black" is a frequently overlooked book that everybody should read.

Weird. I just started that.


Gris - Dec 16, 2006 4:15:16 am PST #1698 of 28160
Hey. New board.

I have read The Moonstone, but never got past the first chapter of The Woman in White (not because it was bad, just circumstances). I quite liked The Moonstone.

i'm reading "In Cold Blood" right now. It's... not actually that great, so far. Kind of boring. "Breakfast at Tiffany's" was a significantly more fun read, to me.


erikaj - Dec 16, 2006 6:10:53 am PST #1699 of 28160
Always Anti-fascist!

So many things set up as The Gold Standard end up that way. Maybe it gets better though. Although some things are Had to Be There books. Like we can't possibly appreciate them the way they did when they came out.


Polter-Cow - Dec 16, 2006 3:55:57 pm PST #1700 of 28160
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

So I used my Walden Pond gift certificate on two whole books. Since it was a gift certificate, I decided to buy books people had fervently recommended to me. One was The Good Soldier. The man approved my selection, saying it was a great book. I told him a friend had recommended it to me because she adored it and no one knew about it. He countered that last statement by noting that I had found a Penguin Great Books of the 20th Century edition; it was one of the greats! I said that, okay, but most people didn't know about it; I hadn't even heard of it until my friend told me.

"You have smart friends," he said.

I also mentioned that she recommended it to me, specifically, because I loved The Remains of the Day, and it took him a few seconds to remember who it was by, and then he mentioned how awful the movie was. He said they took the soul out of the book.

The other book I got was Perdido Street Station, which a friend of mine really loves. I'm not entirely sure how I'll like it, but it definitely sounds worth trying.


Strega - Dec 16, 2006 6:09:37 pm PST #1701 of 28160

then he mentioned how awful the movie was.

And then you punched him in the nose?

...hmph.

But yeah, The Good Soldier always turns up on "great 20th C. novels" lists ( Parades End does too, but a bit less frequently). But there's not much popular awareness of Ford. I never would have heard of him if my prof hadn't been the type to go off on random tangents.


beth b - Dec 16, 2006 7:44:47 pm PST #1702 of 28160
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

Perdido Street Station - on my 150 books to-be-read bookshelf


Polter-Cow - Dec 16, 2006 9:41:55 pm PST #1703 of 28160
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

And then you punched him in the nose?

...hmph.

Heh. I said I thought it was pretty good, decent, and very faithful except for a few parts, but I agree that, okay, it did seem to lack a lot of the soul of the book; they just sort of put the pages on the screen without transferring the depth.

( Parades End does too, but a bit less frequently)

Yeah, he recommended that too.


sumi - Dec 17, 2006 12:04:52 pm PST #1704 of 28160
Art Crawl!!!

I read The Sharing Knife: Beguilement (That's the newest Bujold) and it really isn't what you'd expect. It's a fun, romance in a fantasy setting. I don't know if she's setting up for darkness in the second book but it's a popcorn read. If that's a thing.

I also read the last book in Elliott's Crown of Stars series and who was it who was worried about Alain? It's a very strange thing but I think he's okay. I mean, he's not all happily ever after but it does seem that he is the founder of the family that winds up being that of Emperor Tailleffer and thus Liath and Blessing are his descendents. Not that he ever gets to explain this to them, but I think that he understands it in the end. Overall, I think that the book lost something in the end because it seemed like we were getting the story told from too many ps.o.v. and when Sanglant dies -- it just didn't seem real -- and I suppose that was with good reason.


Megan E. - Dec 17, 2006 2:16:30 pm PST #1705 of 28160

If the theatre were to play The Good German and the Good Shepherd as a double bill could they advertize it as The Good German Shepherd ?