Nifty, Bev!
William ,'Conversations with Dead People'
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."
meara, I can now confirm that having read Three Men and a Boat does add some to the enjoyment of To Say Nothing of the Dog but it really only comes up a few times. I’m probably in about the best place to be reading TSNotD having spent the last few years wallowing in golden age mysteries with a side of P G Wodehouse and just finishing 3 Men and I think the most necessary book to have read would be Gaudy Night. And even that, CW gives a lot of context for her references.
Anyway, now listening to The Best of Connie Willis because it’s got Firewatch and I do think I’m going to try grouping the Oxford Time Travel stories together and see how that goes. I had assumed I’d read everything in the Best of, most of the titles are familiar even if I couldn’t tell you the plot or premise or whatever, but I just started Death on the Nile and I think it’s actually new to me! So that’s exciting.
I just (finally) finished At the Feet of the Sun, the hands of the emperor sequel. Wow, that was long. I enjoyed it though it was very fanciful in parts, and part of what I enjoyed about the original was the sort of…mundane parts? Though obviously that has magic and gods too. I am intrigued to read the third book whenever it comes out, though that’ll be a while!
I am with you, meara. Very long indeed. And while I appreciate the epic-ness I did miss the heroic bureaucracy of Hands. I was kind of disappointed that somebody in universe is trying to make sense of the whole time running at different speeds different places because I totally embraced that it doesn’t make sense and doesn’t have to because it’s magic gone wrong and if there’s an actual explanation I will have to rethink my whole attitude.
In any case, definitely want to know what happens next!
Oh yes with you on giving up on figuring that bit out. It didn’t even make sense to me who’d been where when and how long it had been or what had happened…hand-wavium it is.
I came across some comments on various women authors' opinions on men as they wrote about them:
Jane Austen really said ‘I respect the “I can fix him” movement but that’s just not me. He’ll fix himself if knows what’s good for him’ and that’s why her works are still calling the shots today.
Meanwhile Emily Brönte just said “We can make each other worse.”
Mary Shelley said, “I can make him
Mary Shelley said, “I can make him
Heh!
I just read a book I think would be up a lot of folks' alley: The Adventures of Amina Al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty. Much swashbuckling (SO much swashbuckling), pirates with hearts of gold, a 40-something lady pirate with a bad knee called away from well-earned retirement, all set in a richly developed 12th century Indian Ocean world, and did I mention the swashbuckling?
That does sound juicy, Susan.
I've been eyeing that, Susan - I enjoyed City of Brass and that series and I believe the pirate are related somehow. It sounds even more fun!