I'll be in my bunk.

Jayne ,'War Stories'


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."


Gris - Jan 04, 2014 6:11:55 pm PST #21818 of 28370
Hey. New board.

You guys were right about Eleanor and Park. Good stuff.


Consuela - Jan 07, 2014 6:24:23 am PST #21819 of 28370
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

This is a lovely piece of fiction. Archetypal and North American, all together. I do like Ursula Vernon's stuff, both the written & the art.


sumi - Jan 08, 2014 9:50:37 am PST #21820 of 28370
Art Crawl!!!

Finished my reread of Storm of Swords last night and I had kind of forgotten just how many weddings there are. . . mostly extremely fucked up weddings - but the book could have been called something like "A Wealth of Weddings". . . rather than ASoS.


Amy - Jan 08, 2014 2:44:39 pm PST #21821 of 28370
Because books.

I finished The Snow Child and, predictably, sobbed. That's one I'll go back to again and again, I think.

I was fascinated by the way she didn't punctuate dialogue in the scenes with Faina, as if they were communicating psychically or something, because it gave it more of that fairy tale quality. But even after the baby's born, and you have to assume she was real, she also wasn't quite fully human either .


Kat - Jan 08, 2014 6:30:35 pm PST #21822 of 28370
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

Oh, Amy, I'm so glad you liked it.

Can I also recommend another book? Not a sobbing one, but a pirate romance of sorts? Cinnamon and Gunpowder by Eli Brown.


Pix - Jan 08, 2014 6:37:27 pm PST #21823 of 28370
The status is NOT quo.

Not a sobbing one, but a pirate romance of sorts? Cinnamon and Gunpowder by Eli Brown.

This sounds EXACTLY like what I need right now.

Lately I’ve been chugging through the delightful Sebastian St Cyr Regency mysteries and enjoying the heck out of them.

[link]


Amy - Jan 08, 2014 7:25:35 pm PST #21824 of 28370
Because books.

I'll look it up! And also those Regency mysteries, because I loved the Kate Ross ones.


Pix - Jan 08, 2014 7:31:48 pm PST #21825 of 28370
The status is NOT quo.

Amy. Have you read Tasha Alexander's Lady Emily mystery series? The first is called And Only to Deceive. It took a bit for me to really get into, but they are richly researched, set in a variety of places (and quite vividly so), and feature an intelligent female protagonist. They're set in the late 19th century.


Connie Neil - Jan 08, 2014 7:34:14 pm PST #21826 of 28370
brillig

More books to make note of!


Amy - Jan 08, 2014 7:50:12 pm PST #21827 of 28370
Because books.

Oh! I HAVE that book, Pix! I forgot I had gotten it on my Kindle a while back.