Flavorwire's list of 10 Literary Boardgames.
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."
I want to play The Shining and Pride and Prejudice!
Speculative roller derby anthology being kickstartered: [link]
Justine Larbalestier on snotty readers who dismiss whole genres.
Kindle Science Fiction/Fantasy Deal of the Day: Barbara Hambly's Blood Maidens.
I did buy Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore (for the Kindle, which is hilariously appropriate), and it's all kinds of nerdy fun. I'm about halfway through it (I bought it a week ago, not today). I'm likely to finish it this weekend.
For fans of SF Squeecast, a certain blog column about food and genre fiction is one of those mentioned this month. Around the 20 minute mark. It's a great show, and a great conversation.
It says the bandwidth is exceeded, but does it happen to be this one?? Because she linked to this post on one of Mark's Feed posts, and I really liked it.
And then she started working at my company.
I'm putting all my books in GoodReads - especially the ones I got for free and still haven't gotten around to reading. Although I think I've gone a wee bit overboard in making shelves. A shelf for every series! And books in multiple shelves!
But I've also found I have a couple of duplicate books and I have a growing pile of books to donate to the library. I have a few books that ended up with bad reviews on GoodReads so I'm not going to keep them and try them out.
I am wondering why The Sun Also Rises catapulted Hemingway to the position of "the preeminent writer of his time" according to the biography at the end when absolutely nothing of interest happens for the whole stupid book.
I am sure that some of Hemingway's later books are better, but after my dislike of The Old Man and the Sea and my utter detestation of having wasted time with this one, I'm rather reluctant to try any more.
The Old Man and the Sea was my introduction to Hemingway, and an exercise in staying awake. It's really not the greatest book of his to read first.