From the dept of things that are awesome, Cormac McCarthy chats with the Coen Brothers: [link]
'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."
I just finished From Where the Sun Now Stands, by Will Henry, a novel about Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce seen through the eyes of a young warrior from Joseph's family. It's at once tragedy and coming-of-age story, and I so badly wished I could rewrite history and give them a different ending.
It's an older book, published in 1959, and is currently out of print, but it's been reissued recently enough to be available for cheap at Amazon and in the collections of many libraries.
I don't normally read Westerns, but I'm glad I made an exception in this case. An excellent and moving book.
Recommendations: Anansi Boys and The Book Thief.
Ok - I read American Gods as my First Neil Gaiman novel.
I liked it fine enough. Would I like Coraline?
(conversation in movies reminded me)
Do you generally like creepy kids' books? I like both American Gods and Coraline, but they're very different books. It's a lot shorter than American Gods, so there's that.
I think almost everyone liked Coraline. My other favorite Gaiman books are probably Stardust and Neverwhere.
Do you generally like creepy kids' books?
I don't think that I've really ever read any creepy kids books. As I said, American Gods was my first Gaiman novel, but it was also one of the first .... good lord, I don't even know what genre to put him in.
...
I read a lot of romance and Hollywood biographies (when I'm not reading Harry Potter). I burnt out on them last year and started going through Joe's mostly sci fi library. I started with Ender's Game and Ender's Shadow. I loved them. Then onto American Gods. I'm trying to widen my reading horizons before I turn into middleaged motherly cliche - taking the kids to soccer practice with a Danielle Steel novel tucked under my arm.
Were you (or Em) around for Fay's reading of Wolves in the Walls at the SF2F?
I'd put Gaiman somewhere between fantasy and magical realism, genrewise.
Were you (or Em) around for Fay's reading of Wolves in the Walls at the SF2F?
I think we left in the middle of it. Em has a copy of it that she loves.
She might be a little young for Coraline now, but if she likes Wolves, chances are she'll like his others.
Another fun Gaiman book (in collaboration with Terry Pratchett) is GOOD OMENS.