This is a totally fascinating effort--a teenager's investigation into published authors and symbolism.
Anya ,'Showtime'
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."
I love Ray Bradbury's response. And I love seeing who scrawled across the page, who typed on the page, and who typed a whole new letter.
I love Ray Bradbury's response.
That sentence should just be the answer to everything.
I think Bradbury and Ellison were my favourites.
That sentence should just be the answer to everything.
I'm so tired, I thought for a minute about which sentence you really liked.
Ayn Rand seems like a prickly bitch. Shocker.
"I trust my subconscious implicitly. It is my good pet."
That may be my new tag line.
A history of descriptivism vs proscriptivism: [link]
New rec: "A Samba for Sherlock" by Jose Eugenio Soares. Very dark fiction about Holmes and Watson (and Sarah Bernhardt) in 19th century Brazil. Two warnings: 1) Sherlock is NOT treated respectfully. He is not a good detective in this, not a master of disguise and socially awkward. 2) In spite of being very dark, it has a lot of 12-year old level humor (including at least one joke that actually circulated in my school when I was 12). Tragedy and darkness mixed with burlesque and farce. Which makes it all the darker. The dagger and the pratfall.
Note: new only to me. Ran across a copy while stuck in the waiting room after giving someone a ride to urgent care. The translation was published in the U.S. in 1997. Don't know how much earlier the Portuguese version was published.
A retelling of Cinderella - with robots! (Excerpt at the link.)
io9 compiled the rules of magic for dozens of magical universes: [link]