Steph L. and Dawn and anyone else who may have raved about Skullduggery Pleasant, thank you! I finally got around to reading the first one and it's just wonderful. I'm already thinking about what I will do when I run out of easily accessible e-books in the series...
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 just bit the bullet and ordered them from Amazon UK.
TANITH LOW FOREVER.
Yeah, I'm getting the sense that that is in my future. But I've got a couple of e-books to devour first.
Love Tanith Low! LOVE!
Oh Steph, when I have more time we need to discuss the last one. I finally (!!) finished it and OMG! But I have to go to bed now 'cause I have a job interview in the a.m. and I need to look half-way rested and not puffy. But soon we will discuss!
Awww, man. Louie Zamperini, the subject of Laura Hillenbrand's book Unbroken sent her one of his two Purple Hearts after he read about her struggles with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in her story for the New Yorker "A Sudden Illness."
(He hadn't known about her illness when he was collaborating with her on his story until he read that piece. Her story really is harrowing, btw: "A Sudden Illness.")
Wow, that is very, very cool.
Wow, thank you for that link. What an amazing essay.
What an amazing essay.
Isn't it? I think for anybody who's had to deal with a chronic illness that's been hard to diagnose, dealing with the doubts of physicians and your family it's incredibly validating.
It's hard for me to read because I remember her as a very bouncy, very bright, very sassy 18 y.o. with her whole life ahead of her.
And I was in occasional contact with her during her long illness, but I really didn't understand it while it was going on. I'd send her a tape and wouldn't hear back from her for two years. I'd just presume she wasn't interested in corresponding when she was desperately holding on to the edge of her bed with hellish vertigo.
Isn't it? I think for anybody who's had to deal with a chronic illness that's been hard to diagnose, dealing with the doubts of physicians and your family it's incredibly validating.
Absolutely. I just went to an internist yesterday about my (way, way more minor) fatigue issues. Each time I've seen a new doctor, I've been afraid they might think I'm making it up, or that it's "all in my head," but everyone I've seen has been great. It would make everything so much harder to have doctors responding the way she had to go through.
It's amazing that she's been able to write these books while living through that kind of sickness.
It's hard for me to read because I remember her as a very bouncy, very bright, very sassy 18 y.o. with her whole life ahead of her.
That is hard. Her life has really ended up differently than anyone would have expected.
Did you go to Kenyon, David? I didn't realize you knew her. Cool.