Ooh, the first two Gentleman Bastard books are only $6 on Kindle! Yay, I can finally catch up with this series.
Spike ,'Get It Done'
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."
Does anyone here do reddit/fantasy? Cooking the Books has a site of the week AMA (they're trying to start a new thing) and I'm fidgety-nerves. On the plus side, the interviews match up with a fair number of r/fantasy popular authors, so hopefully it will go ok.
I hope it goes really well!
Me too! You are being awesome in there. Thank you.
Wow, speaking of agonizingly good, I just finished _Wintergirls_. And I hadn't read the description since putting it on hold at the library months before so I'd totally forgotten the subject matter and how painful it might be even for someone without a first person eating disorder experience. Even worse tho, at the end of the audio book the author read a poem based on _Speak_. I'm still sobbing.
I've had Wintergirls on my shelf for two years now and still need to read it. Maybe I'll bump it up.
I went back to The Light Between Oceans which I'm liking more now, and also started Paper Towns, because it belongs to Ben's friend and she wants it back eventually. I'm a little surprised -- I'm not very far in yet, but Margo is striking me as a manic pixie dream girl with a bad attitude, and I'm not sure I like her.
Paper Towns is interesting because it sort of embraces the MPDG trope while also commenting on it. Part of the point of the book is that she's not a Manic Pixie Dream Girl, she's an actual person, which Quentin never saw her as until she was gone.
What P_C white fonted. Keep going with Paper Towns, it's surprisingly touching. Be warned: while reading Wintergirls you might find yourself having unusual issues with food. Thankfully that resolved as soon as I was done with it.
Oh, I'm definitely going to keep reading. Ben loved it, and I told him I would read it, but the difference between this book and The Fault in Our Stars is really noticeable. He's a little more aggressively *John Green* in this book.
I'm mixed on John Green. I loved The Fault in Our Stars and An Abundance of Katherines, and I thought Looking for Alaska and Paper Towns were okay. (And those two books are pretty similar.) And I liked Will Grayson, Will Grayson.