So there is something I can do, besides scream like a woman?

Wesley ,'Chosen'


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."


-t - Jun 09, 2007 8:39:50 am PDT #2821 of 28176
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

Funny, there's something by each of those writers (that I've read) that I really dislike or am at least meh enough on to wonder that the same person wrote the meh thing and the thing I loved. Probably goes with that whole taking chances and evolving and whatnot that I hear writers do.

Oh, hey, not Virginia Woolf! I've got one, can I come up with two more?


hippocampus - Jun 09, 2007 9:59:57 am PDT #2822 of 28176
not your mom's socks.

Elizabeth Bishop - absolutely amazing. Only person I've ever seen successfully make a villanelle blow up on purpose (One Art). and the dentist poem. And the poem to Marianne Moore ('come flying, come flying...'). Oh.

David Quammen and Elizabeth Bishop today. And Eudora Welty ('cause JZ has Flannery.) I've never read Mark Helprin... what is he? and Lydia Davis. I need to re-set the rules of this game.


JZ - Jun 09, 2007 10:22:33 am PDT #2823 of 28176
See? I gave everybody here an opportunity to tell me what a bad person I am and nobody did, because I fuckin' rule.

I've never read Mark Helprin... what is he?

He's unfortunately a particularly pernicious neocon speechwriter, but he's also the creator of largely apolitical fiction with the voices of angels. Probably his best collection of short stories is Ellis Island, and IMO his greatest novels are Winter's Tale and A Soldier Of The Great War (YGreatestHelprinNovelMV). At its best, his writing is incredibly rich, dense, Dickensian magical realism (the novels, anyway -- the short stories tend to be leaner and more grounded in sturdy sullen fact, but still breathtaking). If you have occasion to go to upstate New York in the winter after reading Winter's Tale, you'll do it with your breath held, just... waiting.

I really really wish that in his non-literary life he were at least an old-school Republican whom I could respect, but when he closes that door and opens the fiction part of his brain what comes flooding out is astonishing.


erikaj - Jun 09, 2007 10:30:30 am PDT #2824 of 28176
Always Anti-fascist!

Corwood, you hifalutin' cocksucker...love you lots, don't ever change. Even if you leave me feeling like a hoople that commuted to a state college(just because I am one is no damn excuse) Second JZ's O'Connor love and not because she's one of ours, but that was a Big Deal to me when I found out about it. Pelecanos, because "Hard Revolution" changed my life by showing me that mystery writing could be about Real things. Which, if I'd read back into the history of the form, I'd know, but I'd started on cozies and "The Cat Who..." whatever, not Chandler or Hammett or some of the social heavy hitters. And I'm totally jealous of his record collection, too.


Anne W. - Jun 09, 2007 5:26:23 pm PDT #2825 of 28176
The lost sheep grow teeth, forsake their lambs, and lie with the lions.

What JZ said about Helprin. Winter's Tale is one of my favorite books, ever, and one of the ones I tend to re-read on a regular basis.


hippocampus - Jun 11, 2007 8:38:11 am PDT #2826 of 28176
not your mom's socks.

Someone loaned me a bookseller's advance copy of Marylinne Robinson's new novel 'Shadowcatcher' - I'm only 10 pages in. It's great. I liked Housekeeping as well.


Sparky1 - Jun 11, 2007 8:40:05 am PDT #2827 of 28176
Librarian Warlord

Someone loaned me a bookseller's advance copy of Marylinne Robinson's new novel 'Shadowcatcher' - I'm only 10 pages in. It's great. I liked Housekeeping as well.

I call dibs! (can I do that on books that aren't yours?) I loved Gilead.


hippocampus - Jun 11, 2007 8:49:18 am PDT #2828 of 28176
not your mom's socks.

It's about a writer in LA who has a novel about Edward Curtis, the photographer. So there are two stories. But the first few pages invoke this birds' eye view thing and it is gorgeous. Helps her navigate the reader around LA too.

Sparky - if you can't call dibs (this person, I need to ask permission), then you can borrow my hardcopy. And/or you'll find one under your pillow. If it bears out.


hippocampus - Jun 11, 2007 8:51:52 am PDT #2829 of 28176
not your mom's socks.

do you want to borrow Housekeeping?


-t - Jun 11, 2007 9:00:14 am PDT #2830 of 28176
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

Oh, I loved Housekeeping but I've never thought to look for anything else by her. Must make a note of that.