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."
hey, woke up with wings!
Damnit. NOW how do I get dressed with these things hanging offa my back?
The concept of wingfic makes me laugh and laugh without even having to read any of it.
Wrod. Heh heh heh heh. Visualizing reams of Shaun Cassidy-Leif Garrett fic that would have come from my era. Egads.
Want to read Matt’s version of wingfic, though. The neocons should experience some of our crime-fighting righteousness.
I must learn to trust the Buffistas for all my obscure knowledge needs.
I may be letting you down - the person I heard it from read it in the IHT. So I'm going to search their archives in case the article mentioned the book, but I feel the lead getting cold.
That's all right, Raq, I'm just glad I didn't create the whole concept out of my imagination.
I'm trying to come up with authors who wrote in many genres, or for both children and adults, all under the same name. Joan Aiken is an example -- she wrote The Wolves of Willoughby Chase and a million other children's books, but also wrote Jane Austen "sequels" (before it was in vogue, too) and other adult books, all under the one name.
Any others anyone can think of? I need examples for a column I have to write, and naturally I came up with my hypothesis before I had proof.
Lois Duncan
Judy Blume
Michael Chabon
Neil Gaiman? Diane Duane? Roald Dahl?
Stephen King wrote a book for kids, or at least for young adults.
Did Lois Duncan write for adults, too? Cool.
Judy Blume is perfect.
Don't know Diane Duane -- I'll look her up. Didn't even think if Roald Dahl.
Possibly, you guys should be writing this column.
I think Stephen King is always writing horror, whatever the audience. Actually, I think a lot of authors branch out into children's books, because they're short and they've already got name recognition, but aren't necessarily writing something "different," just modulating their tone and vocabulary.
You'll find the damnedest names on a children's library shelf (John Lithgow, who is quite good, and also Fred Gwynn, who played Hermann Munster).
Fred Gwynn, who played Hermann Munster
We have one of those -- The King Who Rained.
Actually, I think a lot of authors branch out into children's books, because they're short and they've already got name recognition, but aren't necessarily writing something "different," just modulating their tone and vocabulary.
That's why I hesitate to mention Chabon. I want people who are writing adult and children's book simultaneously (like Joan Aiken), not who used their name recognition as a platform to write stuff they might consider more fun.
I thought she did.
Oh, well, I didn't really think of that, AmyLiz. No, not quite like "Wifey" and "Superfudge" Which are both funny, on completely different planets.