I don't recall who read the Dexter that I'm currently listening to, but he's annoying. If I had any hope of getting the book itself out of the library itseld I'd go that way instead.
They so should have gotten Michael C. Hall to do those.
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 don't recall who read the Dexter that I'm currently listening to, but he's annoying. If I had any hope of getting the book itself out of the library itseld I'd go that way instead.
They so should have gotten Michael C. Hall to do those.
We are, Sox.
how do you like it Scrappy?
I have a question about Laurell K. Hamilton. I've never read her, but I find this sentence from her Wikipedia entry hilarious:
Her prose eschews the use of the subjunctive mode.
What is that supposed to mean? That is the sole descriptor of her prose. That's her trademark? That she doesn't realize that it's "I wish I were"?
That's her trademark? That she doesn't realize that it's "I wish I were"?
From the couple books I read, I would say her trademarks are bad sex and over-description of clothes.
She doesn't believe there is anything contrary to fact, particularly if it's related to sex.
"So, if my privates were suddenly to start making noises like a brass band -- hang on, actually, they already are..."
"So, if my privates were suddenly to start making noises like a brass band -- hang on, actually, they already are..."
So tempted to COMM this out of context. I've never read any of her stuff, but this made me snorfle my water.
The first several books were okay, before Anita turned into UberMarySue. Still too many descriptions of clothes, but not a lot of sex and more logic. I haven't read one in awhile but she's bound by some weird sex magic to a sexy vampire, an emo werewolf, and some other dude. And she has to have sex or DIE so she has lots of sex with other random guys. And all the men either are male strippers with super long hair or look like male strippers with super long hair or were male strippers with really long hair.
And the clothing descriptions for the most part are boring. It's not like reading what Jilli wore it's all -- black jeans, black tshirt, with a royal blue button down shirt and black Nikes with a matching royal blue swoosh.
And the clothing descriptions for the most part are boring. It's not like reading what Jilli wore it's all -- black jeans, black tshirt, with a royal blue button down shirt and black Nikes with a matching royal blue swoosh.
Heh. I was about to say "And they're descriptions of BORING clothes!"
The early books are acceptible popcorn books for when you're tired and want fluffy distractions.