Oh, no, oh, no! Spontaneous poetic exclamations. Lord, spare me college boys in love.

Dr. Walsh ,'Potential'


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."


meara - Nov 21, 2007 2:58:52 pm PST #4314 of 28260

And someone was saying you have to email your documents to your kindle's email...and Amazon charges ten cents an email.


DavidS - Nov 24, 2007 1:13:00 pm PST #4315 of 28260
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Powells website (where I am a guest blogger next week, incidentally) has a nice Q&A feature. I liked this bit from Jeff Parker, in response to the question "Have you ever made a literary pilgrimage?":

Every summer when I'm in Russia I go on a Dostoyevsky Walk, a little tour cooked up by my friend James Boobar. The creepiest part is at the end of the tour, where we trespass our way up the stairwell of this old apartment building to the top where sits the supposed door of the pawnbroker (there is controversy as to whether this would be exactly the door Dostoyevsky imagined). There's all this conflicting cheerleader graffiti up there, in twenty or so different languages, saying things like, "Don't do it, Raskolnikov" and "KIIl the bitch!" It's the only time in my life I ever felt a real slippage between an imagined fictional world and an actual place. It's creepy.

Has anybody here made a literary pilgrimage? I don't know that I have really. I guess going to Shakespeare and Co., and Cafe Deux Magots in Paris were pilgrimages. Whenever I go to Kayo Books in SF I'm conscious that I'm in Sam Spade's neighborhood (as well as McTeague's).


Maysa - Nov 24, 2007 2:47:29 pm PST #4316 of 28260

I've never been any place that was connected to an author that I really loved so they weren't pilgrimages really, but I've been to several author's homes. The best was Edgar Allan Poe's house in Philadelphia. The Parks Service runs it and during the tour they take you into his basement, turn off all the lights, and read a creepy short story of Poe's. (When I visited it was "The Masque of the Red Death.") It's a lot of fun.


§ ita § - Nov 24, 2007 2:56:12 pm PST #4317 of 28260
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

When my father was posted to Moscow my mother joined him during the summers (her, not being crazy and all). When I went to visit I noticed that her Moscow residence library consisted entirely of post-Cold War Russian based spy thrillers, which made every jaunt a literary pilgrimage. It was really fascinating.


Susan W. - Nov 24, 2007 2:58:26 pm PST #4318 of 28260
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

Visiting Bath was something of a Jane Austen pilgrimage for me. Actually, half of Britain was an, "I've read about this and now I'm HERE!" experience for me, but that was the strongest association.


Consuela - Nov 24, 2007 4:23:22 pm PST #4319 of 28260
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

When I was going to Paris I looked up the Rue de la Cerisaye (from the Lymond Chronicles) on the map, but we didn't go there.


erikaj - Nov 24, 2007 4:39:45 pm PST #4320 of 28260
Always Anti-fascist!

Supposedly, the house where Edgar Allan Poe was born is on a famous drug corner.(I say it that way cause I haven't been there myself, but know from The Wire "Young man, do you know where the Poe house is?"

"Yo, man, look around!"

I was going to say I had nothing first-hand to contribute, but I have driven past the Safeway where Mary Ann Singleton tried to pick up Mouse. Being that Phoenix has no literary character, and I haven't traveled much, I'm counting it.


ChiKat - Nov 24, 2007 5:39:25 pm PST #4321 of 28260
That man was going to shank me. Over an omelette. Two eggs and a slice of government cheese. Is that what my life is worth?

I visited Rowan Oak, the home of William Faulkner. My friend was working on her PhD at Ole Miss and we went to the house when I visited her. It was pretty cool. And a tad odd since his house now overlooks the baseball diamond at Ole Miss.


lisah - Nov 24, 2007 5:43:57 pm PST #4322 of 28260
Punishingly Intricate

Supposedly, the house where Edgar Allan Poe was born is on a famous drug corner.(I say it that way cause I haven't been there myself, but know from The Wire "Young man, do you know where the Poe house is?"

Actually it's not where he was born but he spent some formative years there (it's where he lived with his cousin who became his child bride). But, yes, it's in a pretty sketchy part of town.


erikaj - Nov 24, 2007 6:06:04 pm PST #4323 of 28260
Always Anti-fascist!

Poe fanciers and cornerboys, huh? Well, considering his life, it's still sort of fitting.