No power in the 'verse can stop me.

River ,'War Stories'


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."


Connie Neil - Jan 24, 2008 9:01:51 am PST #4839 of 28343
brillig

I still want to read the excised chapter that describes the wardrobe of the visiting princess and the hats.

I'm also unreasonably smug that I first read Princess Bride back in the early 80s, before anyone even thought about a movie. Too bad my first edition paperback has the fold-out map ripped off and tucked into the book itself as a bookmark.


Laga - Jan 24, 2008 9:25:45 am PST #4840 of 28343
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

Ages before I saw the movie one of my sister's boyfriends was trying to convince me that the mark of a good novel was long paragraphs. He handed me the book open to the bit about snow sand as an example. I liked it and wanted to read the book but it slipped my mind and then I forgot about it... until I was watching the movie and Buttercup fell in and then my brain started filling in the details of what was going on below the surface. At first I didn't recall reading the excerpt. It was a really odd feeling.


Frankenbuddha - Jan 24, 2008 9:26:10 am PST #4841 of 28343
"We are the Goon Squad and we're coming to town...Beep! Beep!" - David Bowie, "Fashion"

Too bad my first edition paperback has the fold-out map ripped off and tucked into the book itself as a bookmark.

I've done many unfortunate things to paperbacks I had when I was a kid/teenager that I regret. Including the original Richard Bachman paperbacks (actually, the original King paperbacks too, now that I think about it). Among other things, if they had pages that were advertisements for other books, I used to tear those out, because I thought that was cheesy (Signet - I'm looking at you as the prime offender).

hangs head in shame


brenda m - Jan 24, 2008 9:26:56 am PST #4842 of 28343
If you're going through hell/keep on going/don't slow down/keep your fear from showing/you might be gone/'fore the devil even knows you're there

trying to convince me that the mark of a good novel was long paragraphs

Well, that's a new one on me. Could make it easier at the bookstore, I guess.


Polter-Cow - Jan 24, 2008 9:27:00 am PST #4843 of 28343
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Ages before I saw the movie one of my sister's boyfriends was trying to convince me that the mark of a good novel was long paragraphs.

Really? I recently hit a two-page-long paragraph in Midnight's Children. Now I know I'm reading a good novel!


Laga - Jan 24, 2008 9:39:22 am PST #4844 of 28343
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

yeah my sister has had some wacky boyfriends. He was right about Goldman, though.


Toddson - Jan 24, 2008 10:32:30 am PST #4845 of 28343
Friends don't let friends read "Atlas Shrugged"

There's also an official "good parts" version of The Princess Bride - selected bits printed in, I think, red.


-t - Jan 24, 2008 11:40:06 am PST #4846 of 28343
I am a woman of various inclinations and only some of the time are they to burn everything down in frustration

I've read The Silent Gondoliers. It's okay.


Pix - Jan 24, 2008 1:22:49 pm PST #4847 of 28343
The status is NOT quo.

Hey Aimee, when I read The Princess Bride it didn't even occur to me that the stuff about Morganstern and the lawsuit and all that was fictional. I can't remember how I ended up finding out the truth.
This.
But seriously, nobody should feel stupid for making that mistake - it's a tribute to how well Goldman pulls it off that so many people fall for it.
And this.

Also, hi! I can't believe I've been out of the thread for two years. I'm an English teacher--what's wrong with me?

I may have just answered my own question.


justkim - Jan 24, 2008 4:48:21 pm PST #4848 of 28343
Another social casualty...

Jostein Gaarder uses a similar technique in Aemelia Flora, supposedly a letter to St. Augustine from his abandoned lover/mother of his son. Gaarder presents this as a translation of a work he somehow found by pure chance, translated, then submitted to the Vatican (or something) for their records. Sadly, he didn't get a receipt, and the Vatican (or whatever) had no record of ever receiving such a manuscript. I was so intrigued by the "back story" and so frustrated by the lack of any real manuscript to translate myself that I tossed the book aside in disgust and dismay. I want it to be real!

I really should try to read it again.