Slay-er? Chosen One. She who hangs out a lot in cemeteries? You're kidding. Ask around. Look it up: Slayer comma The.

Buffy ,'Showtime'


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."


le nubian - Jan 21, 2013 3:44:45 pm PST #20283 of 28348
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

OMG flea!


flea - Jan 21, 2013 3:47:13 pm PST #20284 of 28348
information libertarian

He was joking, mostly. Here's an article that mentions it: [link]


le nubian - Jan 21, 2013 3:47:32 pm PST #20285 of 28348
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

Gris,

Literature phd Beau says the following about Sun Also Rises:

impotence was symbolic of the age and symbolizes something about war and the modern era. He has not read the book since graduate school, so he is a bit fuzzy on the details.


Sophia Brooks - Jan 21, 2013 3:48:39 pm PST #20286 of 28348
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

Typo, I have not read any Hemingway that was not assigned- I read Old Man, The Big Two Hearted River, Hills Like White Elephants, and The Sun Also Rise. The only one I liked was Sun Also Rises. Everything else was of the blah blah blah man pain school to me. I didn't know the word man pain, but because the Steinbeck, Hemingway, Bret Hart, Ted Hughes, Updike and Salinger I ended up with in high school, I just wanted to read something else!


askye - Jan 21, 2013 3:49:16 pm PST #20287 of 28348
Thrive to spite them

I know I read Old Man and the Sea. I think I read the whole thing, I may have started skimming at some point. All I remember about it is flipping through it and thinking "really there's still more". Which looking at a synopsis of the story must have been my reaction to all the sharks.


Sophia Brooks - Jan 21, 2013 3:52:16 pm PST #20288 of 28348
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

Oh, and I forgot the Fitzgerald. Plus my mother liked Henry Miller.

It is sort of coming back to me, but isn't the inevitability of them not working out and the relentlessness of time beating on cf Gatsby what is referenced by the title bible verse

Turn turn turn. It wasn't the season


Gris - Jan 21, 2013 3:57:39 pm PST #20289 of 28348
Hey. New board.

but the narrator's response is "isn't it pretty to think so."

True. And maybe that has some power. Still, it's a lot of then-I-went-fishing-and-then-there-were-bullfights-and-then-we-got-drunk to get to that. There are moments where he literally writes "And then... . And then... . After that .... And after that..." It's like the plot summary of a boring movie, with random bull-gorings that are described so passionlessly they give me slow-blinks. Which is maybe the point, to show how disconnected blah-dee-blah-blah but that doesn't make it more interesting. At least to me. I would like an arc.


Dana - Jan 21, 2013 3:59:33 pm PST #20290 of 28348
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

This is why I dislike Hemmingway.

Love Gatsby, though.


Sophia Brooks - Jan 21, 2013 4:06:36 pm PST #20291 of 28348
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

I think the "and then....and then" etc is rhyme ally matching the wave like rhythm of the bible verse. Where everything is very inevitable, and it is just this slow beating. It is actually coming back to me why I liked it. I was also reading Virginia Wolfs The waves then, and it has a similar rhythm in parts. It is probably more fun to read in literature class than on ones own, because neither the plot nor the characters grabbed me, but in relation to the despair of the time period and the use of language it was pretty intersting


Sophia Brooks - Jan 21, 2013 4:07:20 pm PST #20292 of 28348
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

That would be rhymically. I can't get the iPhone to work