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."
One summer in college, I went on a King-reading binge. I can't remember what all I read at this point (pretty sure it included The Stand, except that it culminated with The Tommyknockers. I kind of burned myself out on Stephen King for a long time after that.
Pet Sematary I think I read in junior high, and it was the first book I remember reading that actually scared me. Scared the CRAP out of me, as I recall.
Pet Sematary
is almost unbearable after you have kids.
One not-King book I want to reread is Peter Straub's
Floating Dragon.
I remember it scaring the shit out of me, but I only vaguely remember the plot. Like, mostly that there was one.
Pet Sematary is almost unbearable after you have kids.
Man, I do not doubt it.
I just looked up Stephen King's bibliography (I almost asked "What's the word for a discography, but with books?" I blame the headache meds), and I thought I had read a lot more than I have, but it looks like I've only read 5 novels and a couple of collections. But I feel like The Stand (the uncut version) should count for at least 2 books.
The Stand
should definitely count as more than one.
I also wiki'd! And I'm surprised by how many of his books I haven't read. A friend loved
Insomnia
and sent me an extra copy, but it's another tome. I just started
Just After Sunset,
because it's short stories and I have no attention span right now.
Hey, Steph, tell me what you think of
The Diviners
when you're done. I haven't read it yet, but I read the first chapter (possibly less?) online and was really underwhelmed. A friend said that it picks up once Evie is introduced, and that she loved it. And she *didn't* like
A Great and Terrible Beauty.
I haven't read it yet, but I read the first chapter (possibly less?) online and was really underwhelmed.
It really does start slowly. Amazon's sample was something like 11 chapters, and I was going to just stop reading after the first one, but I was killing time after a meeting, so I kept reading, and then it got me.
A friend said that it picks up once Evie is introduced
It definitely really does. I think Bray is taking too long to introduce some elements and integrate them (I hit one of those "Oh, I see how this is coming together!" moments, and realized it was goddamn page 262.)
That said, I'm REALLY enjoying it. It's one of those books where I can't wait to get home from work to read more.
I went on the same binge in college, Steph! For some reason, as and English and theatre major, with all the reading, the only thing I could read for "fun" was Stephan King.
Good to know. I'll probably put it on my Christmas list. I have all of her books but
Beauty Queens
in hardcover, so it would be crazy and obsessive nice to continue the trend.
Good to know. I'll probably put it on my Christmas list.
It's creepy as shit, which makes it timely to be reading now.
They're both good, and they *are* different, but they're also the same at the base. I loved seeing that, how you can take one story and tell it a completely different way.
I've been wanting to read those books for years because the idea behind them sounded so interesting. I wanted to see how they worked together, how they were connected.
Right now I'm beginning my John Green audiobook binge. Just started
Looking for Alaska.
Right now I'm beginning my John Green audiobook binge.
I just discovered the other day that he went to my alma mater, Kenyon.