Yeah, I read the first few pages before I bought it, and I was like, whoa, this is intense. Looking forward to it.
Xander ,'End of Days'
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."
SO good.
Now I kind of want a monster crossover of Pevensies and FitzOsbornes and Maddie and Queenie and Jamie, all fighting the Nazis together.
Ooh, I'll have to keep my eyes peeled for that one.
I saw a link to this elsewhere and thought that the buffistas would appreciate it.
I saw a link to this elsewhere and thought that the buffistas would appreciate it.
That's from Questionable Content, which is a great webcomic.
Also, I am totally buying that t-shirt, because I have been talked into being the librarian for the local ADD support group. Book wrangler!
My librarian friend wore that shirt at Comic-Con.
So I finally got to Busman's Honeymoon on my Wimsey audio-read, and... ::sigh:: why did Harriet go from being prickly educated hyper-intelligent hyper-independent mystery writer woman to... supportive wife with nothing else to do?
WHY?
t sigh
Seriously: once the wedding is over (and I love that she basically spent every penny she had on the dress, so she wouldn't shame herself), she spends all her time worrying about Peter's state of mind, and after every argument she decides that he was right, after all. She contributes very little to the solution of the mystery, and basically doesn't act like the Harriet we met in the previous 3 books at all.
What the hell happened?
I think when she talks about the sacrifice of herself she wasn't talking so much about all her worldly goods for the dress and the present but herself in truth, so she wouldn't be an embarrassment to Peter.
Not satisfying, but I think that's what's going on. There's a short story called Talboys that suggests she didn't completely give up her career.
There's a short story called Talboys that suggests she didn't completely give up her career.
Oh, I'm sure she didn't, but for a relationship that was presented up to that point as a marriage of equals, she almost immediately takes the back seat and spends all her emotional energy worrying about him. There doesn't appear to be anything on her mind not directly associated with the relationship--even the murder itself is of importance only insofar as it affects their honeymoon, and Peter's state of mind.
I find it very hard to reconcile that woman with the Harriet Vane in Gaudy Night or Have His Carcase.
I haven't, but for that price I might try it.