Oh, also:
Arya! That whole bit was fascinating. I hope she doesn't totally learn how to be nobody, though.
Bran wearing Hodor's skin seems not right. I think Bran thinks so, too.
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."
Oh, also:
Arya! That whole bit was fascinating. I hope she doesn't totally learn how to be nobody, though.
Bran wearing Hodor's skin seems not right. I think Bran thinks so, too.
And here is my non-spoilery review of A Game of Thrones.
And here is my non-spoilery review of A Game of Thrones.
As is mentioned in comments over there, GRRM bases almost all of the courtly intrigue on real, historical events. And in many ways some of the more over-the-top parts of that (Joffrey's REDONKULOUS EEEEEEVIL, for example) are the most grounded. I forget exactly which people Joffrey is modeled after, but if his super-evilness seems unrealistic to you, you'll be needing to update and adjust your understanding of reality, because we've have more than one juvenile (or otherwise) monarch that was that evilly insanely evil.
His super-evilness is uninteresting to me. There's no there there. Just because some people chew scenery in real life doesn't mean that's an enjoyable addition to a narrative.
Lots of real things don't entertain me. I think I'd be more involved if he was dialled down a few notches, or there were...I'm not precisely sure which reaction from which person, but that could mitigate it a bit. I just FF over his scenes and hope not too much plot was being developed there.
If it doesn't please, it doesn't please. I rather enjoy hating Joffrey for his ridiculousness. I just thought it was interesting that he's based on real people.
So, when you highlight and annotate, Kindle communicates this back to the mothership.
It's a bit misleading to title this [link] Most Highlighted Passages of All Time because just a glimpse of the results shows you how skewed the sample is.
Also--where are the boys at?
Passing along a "what was that book" request from my professor:
Question for you all: about two weeks ago I was listening to a book review on NPR. The book is historical fiction, set in London in the early twentienth century, focused on two women, one the maid (or housekeeper) for the other. It also features the suffrage movement. But I can't remember the author or title. any ideas?
Could she mean the first Maisie Dobbs book? Maisie grows up in service to a wealthy woman, if I recall right, who then gives her an education. It's a mystery series, though.
Actually, forget that -- if they were reviewing it, it's something new, I would imagine, and the Maisie Dobbs books aren't.
It sounds like Frances Osborne's "Park Lane".
I just scanned [link] but didn't see anything likely.