Just whitefont everything? Headline all posts "Spoilery WIR discussion", so people know which discussion is white fonted?
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."
Should I go ahead and read it, and risk REAL trauma? Or just hope I forget the things he keeps talking about?
I think you should read it. It's definitely sad, but it's also, strangely enough, one of McCarthy's most optimistic novels. My wife loved it, too, and has declared it harsh but worthwhile.
flea, I suggest you seek out a lolcats/Cleolinda version, laugh your ass off, and then not read the book itself. That is what I am planning to do.
(Because I have read my fair share of post-apocalyptic literature in which nothing exciting happens*, and, bored now.)
- If any of McCarthy's characters suddenly don feathered headdresses and go chase each other around the desert in souped-up dune buggies, I imagine I would have heard about it by now.
Not really "Literary" as most of the world would call it, but something I know many Buffistas and the Smart Bitches Trashy Books enjoy...Suzanne Brockmann has a new book Troubleshooters book coming out this summer (her Navy SEALS books that are now not all SEALS). One thing I love is that she writes about gays, alcoholics, interracial romances, and in this one apparently a character who is deaf (due to injury, but still). I love that for an author who started writing about buff military men, she doesn't just write about straight perfect white people.
I'm going to have to go through my romances when I get home tonight--I have an old Silhouette Special Edition in which the hero is a double amputee (both legs near the knee) which I thought was a Brockmann, but according to her backlist, I guess not. It's a really good book, too.
Damn, it's going to drive me nuts until I can find out who wrote it!
Kathy, if you can't find it on your shelves, I bet you could track it down with a Help a Bitch Out request on the Smart Bitches blog.
I know I have it somewhere in my romance bookshelf (I have all of my romances crammed into a 1-yard-square bookshelf in my bedroom--double-stacked two deep and with more books on top, and that was after I weeded out about 3/4ths of my romances before I moved two years ago).
I can see the cover in my head, and I'm pretty sure I have more books by the same author, but I'm damned if I remember who that is. Oh, well, I'll find out when I get home tonight.
I have a heckuva reading list for the summer. I just found out that I'm definitely teaching a 12th grade non-AP class, and I'm inheriting a summer reading list from the teacher who was supposed to have the class originally. The students can choose two books from a list of about ten. I've read only a few of those ten, and I should probably re-read them as well since they aren't fresh in my mind.
Here's my list, in case anyone would like to chat with me about any of these books as I read or re-read them this summer:
They all have to read A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave Eggers.
Then they have to choose at least ONE other non-fiction OR fiction selection from this list:
FICTION:
Tender is the Night
– F. Scott Fitzgerald
A Confederacy of Dunces
– John Kennedy O’Toole
Neuromancer
– William Gibson
Beloved
- Toni Morrison
The Passion
– Jeanette Winterson
The Poisonwood Bible
– Barbara Kingslover
NON-FICTION:
Naked
or
Me Talk Pretty One Day
- David Sedaris
Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Mt. Everest Disaster
- Jon Krakauer
Running with Scissors: A Memoir
- Augusten Burroughs
Wow, this is a *non* honors class, Kristin? A Heartbreaking Work... isn't exactly a quickie.
I would love to reread Beloved with you. It's been so long, and I adored that book. Broke. My. Heart.
I have to read The Poisonwood Bible, too. Or at least I've been meaning to.