I'm actually working on a novel set in the late 19th century.
O, RLY?
One of the main characters is a lecturer/recruiter for the Farmers' Alliance, which later turned into the Populist Party.
I would like to subscribe to your newsletter.
'Trash'
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'm actually working on a novel set in the late 19th century.
O, RLY?
One of the main characters is a lecturer/recruiter for the Farmers' Alliance, which later turned into the Populist Party.
I would like to subscribe to your newsletter.
Boy, are you going to be disappointed when you realize that my newsletter mostly consists of incredibly long lists detailing my nicknames for my cat.
Huh. It's like the Gossip Girl books, but about Christian teens.
Part of me wants to read it, to see what it's like.
Huh. The threatening to "out" someone as a Christian seems odd. I mean, when I was in high school and college, it was not being Christian that was weird.
I suppose it depends on your definitions - being nominally Christian is certainly the norm, but I suspect that being highly observant or a member of one of the more fundamentalist sects would be less so at most colleges.
I suppose so. At my high school, though, the CYO retreats were huge big deal social events, and in college, I got plenty of "Add your name at the bottom of the list and send this on to everyone you know if you love Jesus!" chain emails.
Interesting. I don't really recall seeing any of that.
At my high school, there was a Jewish girl who went to all the CYO events so that she wouldn't miss anything with her friends. (She was kind of on the edge of the popular crowd, which was almost entirely Catholic.)
Well, I did grow up in liberal elitist enclaves, urban public schools, and university in (gasp) Canada, so it's possible my experience isn't representative. I guess.
I grew up in suburban NJ, which tends to be pretty split politically, and then college in New Orleans. In high school, religion was a pretty big defining factor -- just one of those things that you knew about everybody, like you knew what their parents did, or what extracurriculars they did, or stuff like that. One of the things that let us put other kids into categories pretty easily.