Bester: Mal. Whaddya need two mechanics for? Mal: I really don't.

'Out Of Gas'


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."


DebetEsse - May 05, 2013 7:30:08 pm PDT #20747 of 28370
Woe to the fucking wicked.

So, I read a big chunk of House of Leaves on my trip. And, while I thought I had the King James Bible on my tablet, I did not, so I couldn't check a reference where Zampano cited one verse, Johnny corrected it to another, and then the editors corrected it to a third. But I marked the place, and I just went back and looked them up (I now have the King James on my tablet), and I want to give props to the writer for finding 3 verses that fit so well with the characters and then burying them in the footnotes.


Tom Scola - May 06, 2013 8:50:13 am PDT #20748 of 28370
Remember that the frontier of the Rebellion is everywhere. And even the smallest act of insurrection pushes our lines forward.

100 Books that SHOULD be written.


erin_obscure - May 06, 2013 3:55:30 pm PDT #20749 of 28370
Occasionally I’m callous and strange

Finally got around to reading gone girl and...whoa. Very engaging by also somewhat horrifying. I couldn't put it down but also found myself more cranky than usual and having serious doubts about humanity as a whole.


Polter-Cow - May 06, 2013 4:30:10 pm PDT #20750 of 28370
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Ha, Tom. I love the James Joyce one.


sj - May 08, 2013 4:32:42 pm PDT #20751 of 28370
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

I'm just starting book 2 of Gone Girl, and OMGWTF! I did not see that coming.


le nubian - May 08, 2013 4:38:19 pm PDT #20752 of 28370
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

Girl,

the shit gets super cray cray. You have no idea.


sj - May 08, 2013 9:00:04 pm PDT #20753 of 28370
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

I couldn't resist finishing Gone Girl tonight. I kept thinking I could put it down, but then I couldn't. I still want more.

I want to know if she kills him for that last insult or if they end up raising a monster together. I'll go back to see what other people posted about it tomorrow, but for now I really should go to bed.


Jessica - May 09, 2013 7:45:23 am PDT #20754 of 28370
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

Have people seen this? Book covers redrawn as if the author were the opposite gender. It's a neat little thought experiment. I love the female Clockwork Orange cover:

[link]


Gris - May 09, 2013 8:23:25 am PDT #20755 of 28370
Hey. New board.

I like that! It's cool.

I don't actually mind gender-marketed covers, though. My problem is with the men who want to read the books more pitched toward women but get embarrassed by the cover.

A) get a Kindle
B) or just read the pink book. Who cares? Anybody who judges you for liking Shopaholics wouldn't be your friend if you knew them, so why cater to them?

Frankly, I like the fact that I can easily tell which books are by Sophie Kinsella or might as well be from a mile away - as a male who really enjoys reading that genre, I appreciate the clear signal. I have learned that I enjoy books marketed in that manner. Similarly, I enjoy the Serious Thriller mass market covers that inform me this book is by Dean Koontz or might as well be, because I let my eye wander right past them. Show me an alien? I'll at least read the summary.

I am part of the target markets that I choose to be part of. The marketing itself then serves me. Although I may like to preach "Don't judge a book by its cover", I would find a coverless bookstore to be intimidating and confusing.


sj - May 09, 2013 9:02:23 am PDT #20756 of 28370
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

Gone Girl was a page turner for sure, and there were some things I liked about it, but so much of the characterization just did not work for me, and all the hype about how it's a book about marriage and men and women and blah blah blah... uh, if
you're married to a total psychopath (sociopath?), then perhaps it would give you some insight into your own marriage, but otherwise it didn't seem to have a whole lot to say about actual human relationships.

I disagree with this. I think the book had a lot to say about how people often present one face to a significant other when you first start dating and then end up showing your real self little by little over time. It was just taken to the extreme in this case.

I also thought there was some great stuff in the book about journalism and the media and how they report on things like a missing woman, and how easy it is to sway public perception of someone's guilt or innocence.

Just started Gone Girl -- maybe four chapters in -- and I love it. She's an incredible writer. I'm a little wary about hating the plot of it toward the end, because there was a pretty divisive twist, right?

The writing really was incredible. Has anyone read any of Flynn's other books? I think I need to check them out.

yeah, you too see the ending more "favorably" than I did. I really hated it. Makes me wonder
if this is how her parents started out .

I loved the ending, but the book did really make me wonder about Amy's parents. They're really the great unsolved mystery of the book. How exactly did they end up raising someone like Amy, and was their marriage really as perfect as it seemed from the outside? Was it a perfect marriage where they only cared about each other and not as much about Amy help turn Amy into what she was? What does that say about Amy and Nick's baby's future? Can two such messed up people raise a perfectly normal child?

Count me among those who think the ending of Gone Girl is rather perfect. Not satisfying in any way, but perfect.

I agree. I loved that I couldn't figure out where it was going to go, even as the end got closer and closer.

I'd really love it if Flynn wrote another book someday from the point of view of the kid, and I'd also love another book with the lawyer and his wife.