Well, we may not have parted on the best of terms. I realize certain words were exchanged. Also, certain... bullets. But that's air through the engine. It's past. We're business people.

Mal ,'Serenity'


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."


dcp - Apr 30, 2008 4:59:33 pm PDT #5607 of 28344
The more I learn, the more I realize how little I know.

Beautiful writing, but tough stories.

They're making a movie of In the Electric Mist with Confederate Dead [link]


Typo Boy - Apr 30, 2008 6:18:47 pm PDT #5608 of 28344
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

She was a creature of her era. Not everyone can be more enlightened than the people around them.

just a teeny bit defensive of my biggest literary girlcrush next to MFK Fisher

Hmm don't want to harsh on your girl crush. But on just about anything but feminism she was reactionary even for her time. Anti-labor at a time when huge labor struggles were taking place. A supporter of aristocratic privilege at a time when even many Tories admitted that privilege needed reform. Even her feminism including the view that the suffragettes of the preceding generation were dull and dowdy, and that she was part of a more conservative fun branch of feminism. A lot of this arose from her particular interpretation of Catholicism which (in her view) seemed to require a lot of very reactionary. You don't have to end your girlcrush. She was a brilliant writer, a brilliant theologician, probably a witty and charming person to know. But even with the context of her time, she chose to side with the right. If she was alive today that would translate into some sort of very conservative feminism. Megan McArdle AKA Jane Galt is about where her relative position on the political spectrum then might translate on the political spectrum into today.


Consuela - Apr 30, 2008 6:21:02 pm PDT #5609 of 28344
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

Dana Stabenow has two good series of mysteries set in Alaska. The Kate Shugak ones involve a lot of Native issues; the Liam Campbell ones are set on the coast and involve fishing and bush pilots. Both have ongoing arcs dealing with the lead character's love lives. I like them: they have a real sense of place, and Dana Stabenow is a big Buffy fangirl.


Pix - Apr 30, 2008 6:22:56 pm PDT #5610 of 28344
The status is NOT quo.

I love Nevada Barr, so Dana Stabenow sounds fascinating.


Amy - Apr 30, 2008 6:26:18 pm PDT #5611 of 28344
Because books.

I got to copyedit a Dana Stabenow once, and I sort of fangirled all over it. I had never read her, and at the time I had done a bunch of really disappointing mysteries for St. Martin's (like, "why did they publish this?!" disappointing), and I loved the Stabenow book.

Try the Crombie books sometime, though, Kristin! I promise you'll like them.


Consuela - Apr 30, 2008 6:30:06 pm PDT #5612 of 28344
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

Amy, I admit that while I really enjoy Stabenow's storytelling and characters, her tendency to change povs in the middle of a paragraph never ceases to annoy me. I've become kind of a hardass on pov.

On edit: not, of course, that you are to be blamed for her failings...

t grins and shrugs


Amy - Apr 30, 2008 6:34:17 pm PDT #5613 of 28344
Because books.

It's so long ago that I can't say for sure, but if she did that in the manuscript I had, I would have queried it. Big no-no in my eyes.

And while I did like it and read one other, I didn't keep up. Too many books, too little time (too much good porn fic to read on the intarwebs...)


Consuela - Apr 30, 2008 6:36:16 pm PDT #5614 of 28344
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

She's done it for her entire career, so I suspect a query wouldn't have made much difference.

And the newer stuff? Occasionally kinda porny.


dcp - Apr 30, 2008 6:43:31 pm PDT #5615 of 28344
The more I learn, the more I realize how little I know.

It was a link about BtVS from Dana Stabenow's web site that led me to Buffy threads on WorldCrossing. I lurked there once in a while, then followed the crowd to here, where I lurked some more.

I liked Stabenow's "Star Svensdotter" series a lot. My copies didn't survive my move from Colorado in 1997, and I haven't been able to find them to replace them, but if you ever come across any of the three, I recommend them.

The Kate Shugak series was pretty good. Interesting stories, interesting characters, some humor, and as Consuela said, a great sense of place. She lost me after about the seventh book. Kate had become unlikeable, and too many people were being too stupid, it broke my willing suspension of disbelief.

The first couple of Liam Campbell books were merely okay. I kept nit-picking the flying scenes, and I lost interest in continuing.

I didn't like Blindfold Game at all. Her blog entries from her time spent on board a Coast Guard cutter doing research for the book were much more interesting.


Susan W. - Apr 30, 2008 7:33:30 pm PDT #5616 of 28344
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

No, Susan said that the one she voted for was historical, with the 2 basically naked people. Because y'know, people throughout history have been naked....

I could've lived with the naked. But no one was naked with those hairstyles 200 years ago!