I have read Shiver. I liked it well enough but not enough to wait and then buy the new book that came after.
I did, however, love her Scipio Races which was amazing. Highly highly highly recommend.
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 have read Shiver. I liked it well enough but not enough to wait and then buy the new book that came after.
I did, however, love her Scipio Races which was amazing. Highly highly highly recommend.
So I liked Greenwitch more than the first two books! I don't think I'll end up loving the series, but I'm hoping I can eke out a general like now.
Jo Walton catalogs (and, best of all, links) to stories that have pulled titles from Blake's Tyger and Marvell's Mistress. I like this so much, I'm trying to ignore the 1st paragraph typo that I'm sure they'll fix soon. [link]
I've joined goodreads! I don't suppose there's an easy way to find friends without letting it search my email or connecting to fb?
smonster, email me and I'll send my link.
Friending almost any Buffista will give you a list of the rest of us, I think. (If you click on someone's profile, you'll be able to see their friends in the righthand sidebar.)
:) that works too
Jessica, I used you as my gateway Buffista. And now I've hit my limit for friend request for the day! Whoops.
Oh, so that was you! Your e-mail address amuses me.
I finished Night Circus. The language was beautiful, but I found some of the details opaque. I get what they did in the end, and it had been neatly foreshadowed, but because I felt a bit distanced from the workings of the world I guess I just wasn't feeling the tension.
The back of the book blurb (and therefore I guess it wasn't a spoiler) said that Celia and Marco fall in love, which isn't the biggest surprise, but it doesn't really happen until halfway through a decently long book. Which left me with a feeling of inevitability, as opposed to a subtly shown inexorable step.
I didn't get a proper sense of the characters either. And the way the book jumped around in time didn't help. I found out working out how when Bailey was supposed to join the circus and when Thiessen was killed confusing enough that I had to stop reading and go back and string together the years in each chapter title.
Sadly, I could not visualise the clothing...the dresses specifically. Trying to apply the descriptions to general turn of the century styles left me all the more perplexed for having tried. Like, dude, where are all these ribbons attached, exactly?
I mean, I get the silhouette and basic frills ( [link] ), but with the amount of description allotted so many of the dresses, I felt too unsure about what I should have been seeing.