Monty: Whaddya mean she ain't my wife? Mal: She ain't your wife... cause she's married to me.

'Trash'


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."


Amy - Oct 31, 2007 12:31:37 pm PDT #4229 of 28239
Because books.

I don't think everything coming out is torture. A few of the films in that AfterDark Horrorfest last year (now showing on SciFi and available on NetFlix, I believe) were traditional ghost and horror stories.

I don't like them, but I don't think you discount the torture films as a legitimate extension of the horror genre, either.


Laga - Oct 31, 2007 1:31:10 pm PDT #4230 of 28239
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

There was a rash of PG-13 horror flicks based on Japanese films.


Strega - Oct 31, 2007 8:36:23 pm PDT #4231 of 28239

I'm sure there are theses that link the sociopolitical climate of the time to whether or not horror is entertainment, and if so what kind.

The theory is that horror movies are popular when things are going badly. People are anxious; they want catharsis. So, Japan's economic downturn in the 1990s led to the horror boom over there.

With print... I think horror is better suited to short forms, and the market for short stories and novellas has withered away. Although, it seems to me that the number of horror comics is increasing, so maybe that's where the short-story writers are going.


erikaj - Nov 01, 2007 1:10:35 pm PDT #4232 of 28239
Always Anti-fascist!

I belong to a feminist book group and I'd like to suggest a work of fiction for one of the meetings: They've read "Posession" which I liked but they all hated, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman(Whatsherface from The Yellow Wallpaper) I love fiction, but I'm not sure what to suggest. We mostly read...manifestos, I suppose. I want something a little challenging, but not as involved as "Possession", but not so Oprah-ish that there's only one possible reaction you could have(group leader likes debate) Thoughts?


lisah - Nov 01, 2007 1:14:59 pm PDT #4233 of 28239
Punishingly Intricate

You know, erika, I think you could do any of Laura Lippman's last three stand alones and find a lot to talk about (especially Every Secret Thing which has a whole passel of complicated women characters). They are very well written and move along nicely. Plus it would be fun for you!


flea - Nov 01, 2007 1:15:01 pm PDT #4234 of 28239
information libertarian

If your book club hated Possession, I think you need a new book club.

Signed, possibly irrational with the love.

Rationally, I suggest "Little Women."


erikaj - Nov 01, 2007 1:20:47 pm PDT #4235 of 28239
Always Anti-fascist!

I'm guessing they're impatient, flea. It took some investment, but I liked it a lot when I took the time for it. Lisah, good idea. Might as well work with my crime-junkie proclivities, but I'll be keeping track of the other suggestions as well because we're a smallish group.


Scrappy - Nov 01, 2007 1:25:38 pm PDT #4236 of 28239
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

I'd suggest Margaret Atwood'd Cat's Eye [link] which is a fucking great book. Or Ellen Foster by Kaye Gibbons, [link] which is slighter, but a good read.


Jars - Nov 01, 2007 1:46:15 pm PDT #4237 of 28239

The Wide Sargasso Sea? Although I don't know if that's feminist so much as postmodern...


Ginger - Nov 01, 2007 2:48:09 pm PDT #4238 of 28239
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

The Awakening by Kate Chopin is a classic feminist work, although certainly not cheery. For something different, there's Louisa May Alcott's Work, which is a semi-biographical adult novel that talks about the difficulties women had trying to make a living. Another possibility is Dorothy Sayers' Gaudy Night, which focuses on the choices women have to make.