Yeah, I'm coming down that way to, Nanita.
'Shindig'
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."
ABE.com article on Edward Gorey.
I think I'll pass on reading the new book, but this is motivating me to check out and read To Kill a Mockingbird when I next have some free time.
I remember being the only person in my class who wasn't head-over-heels-this-is-my-favorite-book-in-all-of-bookdom for To Kill a Mockingbird, though -- to be clear -- I didn't dislike it. But I was a weird teen who preferred John Irving's enormously fucked-up books to anything considered a classic (and in retrospect, what teacher assigns Hotel New Hampshire to 17-year-olds???). I probably need to re-read To Kill a Mockingbird at some point.
Hotel New Hampshire might be my favorite book ever, but I also love To Kill a Mockingbird. Neither were assigned in school, but I did read TKAM for "outside reading".
I've never actually read Mockingbird. I don't think my high school English class assigned it, but there were multiple English tracks, one for those who couldn't face Mr. Berryhill and one for those who could.
Boo Radley is my spirit animal.
(blasphemer)My favorite thing about To Kill A Mockingbird is the line in Benny and Joon when Joon asks, "Having ourselves a little Boo Radley moment?" She was probably speaking of Robert Duvall in the movie, though. The book didn't make much impression on me. My fondness for the story is all for the movie.(/blasphemer)
Maybe I need to read it again, if I can get the echo of Gregory Peck out of my head.
I really do want to read Mockingbird again now. And then see the film again. Had to read it in high school, but had read it for pleasure in the school library the year before it was Required.
I also have an indecent curiosity about the new book despite the author's wishes about it.
TKAM is one example of a book and a film being equally great, I think.
I'm curious about the new book, too, I have to admit, especially if it's true that she wrote it first, and wrote TKAM on her editor's suggestion.