or publish. dag.
River ,'Safe'
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."
Ain't it the truth, Bunk.
yeah, wrod. It's all in the (letters) game.
I have the Crusie/dude book. I am having a hard time reading fiction at the moment, so factor that in. It has all the patented Crusie snark, but I'm not finding myself caring about the characters as much as I usually do. YMMV.
Just finished A Million Little Pieces this morning before I came to work. Despite the controversy, it was a fabulous book. I really liked his style of telling "his story".
At some point the Pulitzer people will become aware of blogs and enter into the present era.
I have a friend who would swear that would be the novel's death. He has a pedantic streak, though.
If the novel's time has come, so be it.
The novel was not the death of the play. Blogs have their strengths and weaknesses. But they are written in fragments. If the novel dies, something other than blogs will kill it, possibly short attention spans. Mind you there have always been books that could have been blogs if written at the right time. Almost everything Erma Bombeck ever wrote could have been delivered in blog form without losing any continuity. The Federalist papers could have been a blog. Rather than killing the novel, what the blog is doing is reviving the essay.
For me, this is about mediation. The Pulitzer people are the ultimate in mediators.
You are dumb. We is smart. Listen unto us. We are of Pulitzer, therefore wise.
That aside ... the fragmentary, immiediate nature of blogs is the thing that should attract the Pulizer commitee. So what if it is harder to find the good stuff among all the me-too and other chaff? That is what the Pulitizer is for, after all.