Saffron: But we've been wed. Aren't we to become one flesh? Mal: Well, no, uh... We're still two fleshes here, and I think that your flesh ought to sleep somewhere else.

'Our Mrs. Reynolds'


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."


Laura - Jul 22, 2022 2:24:19 pm PDT #27392 of 27939
Our wings are not tired.

I wouldn't normally pick this sort of thing, but it is a very small community here and I actually was in elementary school with the librarian. It is the local library book club. So I'm kind of hoping I am not alone with my utter boredom. I am able to say nice things about the author to be polite and all that.

Last month was even more bizarre with the pick being #13 in Louise Penny Gamache series. Glass Houses. I had read the previous 12 but none of the other people had so we had a different experience. It was one of my least favorites of a great series too! I told them all they really had to start with Still Life.


-t - Jul 22, 2022 2:40:04 pm PDT #27393 of 27939
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

Oh, that would be weird to read just that one! I had to google to see which one it was (Penny's titles are not generally attached to her plots in my head, alas) and I only vaguely remember it so I think I am with you in not preferring it. I hope the book club has more congenial choices for you coming up!


-t - Jul 22, 2022 2:55:43 pm PDT #27394 of 27939
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

I am currently reading a mystery series that I stumbled across because the first book in a different series by the same author showed up on one of the emails that tells me about deals on books and I was intrigued by the title enough to look into the series and this first book is all there is of it so far but there was this other series that is Regency era and I thought sounded vaguely familiar (but that may only be because Kurland St Mary is slightly reminiscent of St Mary Meade) and the first book of *that* series was available on Kindle Unlimited, so I gave it a try and I quite like it! Kurland St Mary Mysteries by Catherine Lloyd - likable characters with relatable problems, decent mysteries, either well researched or plausibly made up historical detail. The first one is Death Comes to the Village.


Laura - Jul 22, 2022 2:59:45 pm PDT #27395 of 27939
Our wings are not tired.

I'll investigate that one, -t. I do like a series. Maybe I'll recommend it for the book club!


meara - Jul 22, 2022 6:54:08 pm PDT #27396 of 27939

I do love some mysteries that are not modern!


Cashmere - Jul 23, 2022 9:50:45 pm PDT #27397 of 27939
Now tagless for your comfort.

Laura, Anne LeBastille? My old boss at The Nature Conservancy used to vacation in the Adirondacks and gave me a signed copy. I felt pretty much the same.


Laura - Jul 24, 2022 5:48:49 am PDT #27398 of 27939
Our wings are not tired.

Oh yeah, Cash. Her high opinion of herself kind of overshadows her accomplishments. I guess the locals don't care much for her either. I'll be interested to see what the consensus of opinion is tomorrow at the meeting. My sister hasn't opened it yet! I told her to read the jacket cover.


Calli - Aug 02, 2022 12:51:38 pm PDT #27399 of 27939
I must obey the inscrutable exhortations of my soul—Calvin and Hobbs

I just finished Psalm for the Wildbuilt, and I immediately put a hold on the sequel at the library. It's great to read a book that I found gripping—I very much wanted to see how it ended—with such an underlying thread of kindness.


meara - Aug 02, 2022 1:10:45 pm PDT #27400 of 27939

Calli, I found somewhere (off tiktok?) a list of …I dont remember what they called them—calm books? Comfort books? Cottage core? Anyway. Books like that. Many of them were ones I’d already read and loved, but a few I was able to download. I’ve really been appreciating that kind of book lately. I highly recommend Celia Lake, but I don’t know that any of her books are library ones, sadly. I gave in and bought each of them eventually! Magical England in the post WW1 era, mostly.


Calli - Aug 02, 2022 1:33:54 pm PDT #27401 of 27939
I must obey the inscrutable exhortations of my soul—Calvin and Hobbs

Thank you, meara. I'll check Celia Lake out.