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."
If I've read Mojo Conjure Stories (anthology) and and Midnight Robber, which Nalo Hopkinson should I read next? I haven't read them recently, so if it's a sequel, I'll go back (to paper...ack!) and catch up, but I'd prefer not to.
Also, has anyone here read Marlon James? My sister "forced" one of his books on me (John Crow's Devil--it's pretty good, but I haven't finished it...it's been forever), but she's a major fangirl. Accosted him into conversation for half an hour at a lit festival, and would not let him escape. If she had revealed she'd cut off his foot, at that point in the story, I wouldn't be surprised.
I heard an interview with Marlon James a few years ago, about a novel about women slaves on Haiti planning a revolt. I never got around to tracking down the book, but he (and it) sounded fascinating.
I had not heard of Marlon James before, but I'm going to have to check out "The Book of Night Women;" an interview gave a excerpt and he states Morrison and Atwood as influences -- two of my favorite authors. It looks quite interesting.
I re-read Beloved once a year, every year, for the harsh beauty of it. I sorely wanted to teach it to my seniors, but was told by by my Black superintendent (who told me she has never read "Beloved") that it was "too controversial" for my inner-city, 98% Black students. However, "Native Son" was just fine....I boggled. NS is an important book, but IMO, Beloved is far superior a piece of writing. Inhave to wonder if she had read Native Son, either.
And how can a person say a book is too controversial when one has not READ it? I cannot grok.
And how can a person say a book is too controversial when one has not READ it? I cannot grok.
It's been a long time since I read Beloved, but I would assume that the
killing of the baby
would be the sticking point there.
No, I think it was the sexual content, truly. My super was very conservative. But Native Son has rape, mutual male masturbation and graphic murders in it, so...
Erin, I taught Beloved to college students and yeah, some of the students were shocked by the sex in it. It's probably just me, but I find it disturbing that more people find sex upsetting than graphic murder.
Yeah, my sister says Morrison came up in her discussion with James. Unsurprisingly she's a big deal in my family (randomly, my mother is sometimes mistaken for her, and she never corrects the error. She's even been mistaken for her with a picture right there. I don't see it
that
much).
Last night I realised I didn't have my own copies of her books. I'm fixing that, starting with The Bluest Eye. That book freaked me out and upset me when I was little.
Burrell, I agree.
ita !, I have taught TBE, at a different school, and it was a very good book to teach. It IS very disturbing, and si impressive, on its own, yes, but especially as her first novel.
I saw Morrison speak once and it was fantastic. It was right when "Paradise" was released.
I still think "The Bluest Eye" is the best one, but I admire a bunch of the others, too.
I don't even remember the sex in Beloved. However, there are plenty of very disturbing images in it that will be seared in my brain forever.