Do you want to post that in GWW, too, sumi?
'Shells'
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."
Sure.
The first three have been published in Australia (that's where Cooper lives) but the 3rd one won't be out in the US until October.
Oooh! With this info, I ordered a copy from Australia.
I believe it might be possible for me to teach the first book next year -- I will have a 9th grade honors class I think. Hmmmm....Must consider a grant.
The next J.K. Rowling? Bloomsbury is hoping so, anyway.
The book sounds pretty good. I'll probably read it.
I think so, too. The only issue is that it's not going to cross over to the kids' market. But then, Stieg Larsson did okay!
Neil Gaiman is interviewed in the NY Times about his reading habits.
Ginger, I think you'll appreciate this:
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If you could meet any writer, dead or alive, who would it be? What would you want to know? Have you ever written to an author?
As a teenager I wrote to R. A. Lafferty. And he responded, too, with letters that were like R. A. Lafferty short stories, filled with elliptical answers to straight questions and simple answers to complicated ones.
He was a sui generis writer, the oddest and most frustratingly delightful of American tall-tale tellers. Not a lot of people have read him, and even fewer like what he wrote, but those of us who like him like him all the way. We never met.
The last time I wrote to Lafferty, he had Alzheimer’s and was in a home in Oklahoma, shortly before his death, and I do not believe he read or understood the letter, but it made me feel like I was doing something right by writing it and sending it.
Jenny Lawson - The Bloggess - got some good news.
Yay, Bloggess. That book is totes going on my birthday list, if I don't manage to acquire it sooner.
There was a good review from Texas Monthly in the NY Times: [link] It's an excellent book, although I think some of the asides could have been handled better, and it's nice to see Victor as more than a comic foil. Her background does make it understandable that Victor might be concerned that her growing collection of taxidermied animals might lead to things like late-night squirrel puppets.
Ray Lafferty was a funny little man. He used to wander around at sf conventions in the '70s, drinking out of a bottle and making snarky remarks until he passed out.