Nobody can tell Marmaduke what to do. That's my kind of dog.

Trick ,'First Date'


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."


Polter-Cow - Oct 02, 2007 2:32:18 pm PDT #4132 of 28222
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

That was awesome, Hec. Thanks. I just finished reading that book, so it was a good time.

As for the Gene Wolfe quote...this is the umpteenth time I'm telling myself I haven't written fiction in over four years, and it's high time to pick that shit up again.


DavidS - Oct 02, 2007 2:35:35 pm PDT #4133 of 28222
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

this is the umpteenth time I'm telling myself I haven't written fiction in over four years, and it's high time to pick that shit up again.

Yep. It was resonant for me because in writing the Swordfishtrombones book I felt like I had to invent something new every day. That it wasn't just laid out in front of me like a research paper or something. That it required active imagining.

And then I'd get stuck but I learned to trust that something would come and since I was in that good writing space something did come. Every time I looked at a section and could not imagine what came next - I'd imagine it.

But it felt like I was inventing writing itself from scratch. I knew what I wanted to say but there were no answers except for the ones I created.

In short, don't let Not Knowing How To Write A Book stop you. You're going to have to make it up anyway.


Liese S. - Oct 02, 2007 3:15:55 pm PDT #4134 of 28222
"Faded like the lilac, he thought."

I think this is probably why writing works for me so much. What with the Imposter Syndrome and everything, it's best if I'm doing something where I'm supposed to be making it up as I go.


Volans - Oct 02, 2007 4:00:02 pm PDT #4135 of 28222
move out and draw fire

I think adults are only supposed to read things that have insightful things about the angst of modern existence. Anything else is trite escapism.

So true. And I'm so over Insightful Angst.

Another way to look at it: If Oprah recs it, it's OK. If not, random co-workers can have judgment about it.

SANDWORMS OF DUNE, by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson?!!

Earworms of Dune.


erikaj - Oct 03, 2007 12:43:06 pm PDT #4136 of 28222
Always Anti-fascist!

Toni Morrison has been an Oprah rec, though, and I think Toni Morrison is a genius.(Her first book "The Bluest Eye" is best though because she wasn't *trying* be a genius so it is clear and simple.) I'm glad I've outgrown my teenage urge to tell people junk about their reading habits. It doesn't make you look smart...it makes you look like a dick.


Volans - Oct 04, 2007 5:20:30 am PDT #4137 of 28222
move out and draw fire

No, Oprah has definitely recommended some excellent books; I'm commenting more on the fact that "people" need to have those books recommended by someone like Oprah in order to think they are OK to read.

Is this a holdover from school? That only English-class-books are "real" reading? I don't know. I just know that I talk to everyone about what they read, and as a result have developed appreciation for whole genres (historical romance, for example) that I would never have otherwise.

I mean, I threw "The Bluest Eye" across the room the first time I read it...but then, I wasn't used to books making me unhappy and uncomfortable like that.


sumi - Oct 04, 2007 5:27:22 am PDT #4138 of 28222
Art Crawl!!!

Alan Rickman reads Sonnet 130


Emily - Oct 04, 2007 5:45:17 am PDT #4139 of 28222
"In the equation E = mc⬧, c⬧ is a pretty big honking number." - Scola

For some class or other, I read both Bastard Out of Carolina and Ellen Foster. Shortly thereafter, The Book of Ruth. At some point, I stopped being able to get any real meaning out of the books and started experiencing them much like that kind of fanfiction which describes Mulder being tortured by aliens and then rescued by people who spend a week gang-raping him and leave him for dead, after which he is miraculously rescued by people who heal him up and then torture him in the basement for months before he is reabducted by the aliens. In multiple installments totalling 20,000 words.


Aims - Oct 04, 2007 5:57:01 am PDT #4140 of 28222
Shit's all sorts of different now.

Alan Rickman reads Sonnet 130

I so want to click that link, but I only have the one pair of panties with me today.


Emily - Oct 04, 2007 6:07:57 am PDT #4141 of 28222
"In the equation E = mc⬧, c⬧ is a pretty big honking number." - Scola

Alas, I think Jen's spoiled that sonnet for me.