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."
wow that looks really interesting.
I'm looking for a recommendation for my dad. He likes Will Cuppy and Mister Dooley(Finley Peter Dunne), Lewis Grizzard, Carl Hiaasen and PJ O'Rourke. He's interested in the US civil war and he likes jazz, especially Dave Brubeck and Stan Kenton. For his birthday I got him a book about The Everleigh Club called Sin in the Second City. Any ideas?
Oh! You guys, I met Candy Tan from Smart Bitches yesterday at a wedding. She's pretty cool. Her nametag read, "Your Resident D-List Internet Celebrity."
They made you wear name tags at a wedding? What did yours say?
I met Candy Tan from Smart Bitches yesterday at a wedding. She's pretty cool. Her nametag read, "Your Resident D-List Internet Celebrity."
What the heck kind of wedding was this??? I'm jealous, it sounds very cool! Also, jealous cause I'd love to meet her, I love the Smart Bitches!
And, I love the Seattle Library, because I was able to just put both "Whipping Girl" adn "Woman's World" on hold, with about thirty seconds worth of searchign and three clicks. And in just a few weeks (or less--one I'm second in line, one I'm #8), they will be delivered to the library three blocks away, and I will get an email telling me they're waiting.
Which is what I did for "Farthing", which was also discussed here, and I read last night. It was really good, but I didn't realize it was quite so depressing. Eep.
While waiting for a bus to Safeco Field Friday night, I saw a fellow Metro passenger just finishing
Kushiel's Mercy.
I'm currently 29 of 56 on the hold list, since I wasn't paying enough attention to release dates to request it when I should have, and it's still listed as "On Order" as opposed to "Just Received" at the library website.
Because of that, I toyed with offering the woman the $30 cash I had in my wallet for her copy, but ultimately decided it wouldn't kill me to wait a month or so. Which is just as well, because one of my CPs just sent me her full manuscript and needs me to read it within the week because she's had an editor request the full and promised to send it by July 1.
ION, I just finished Cory Doctorow's
Little Brother.
I enjoyed it, but I found it a little too didactic--almost like the Afterschool Special for resisting government tyranny. None of the reviews I've read had the same problem, though, so it could be just me.
It used to be that it was worth it to into big book stores like B&N or Borders -- because they were big enough to carry somethings that weren't necessarily popular. Now you can find every title out there with a vampire in the book -- but they couldn't identify
woman's world,
or at least not the book Steph is reading.It is on the website, but not in the local stores. and even though I found it on the web site , they didn't in the store so I have to bring in the ISBN to order it. I wasn't even 100% sure I wanted to buy it ( can't get it at the library) . They didn't have Knut's book either. Of course , they did have the buffy comic book -- but like I said Vampires.
I got Knut's book at Borders on Friday. Also this book by a friend of mine, which they had several copies of, but in the camping section, which made no sense. I'm hoping there were some in a display I didn't see somewhere.
I was able to just put both "Whipping Girl" adn "Woman's World" on hold
they couldn't identify woman's world, or at least not the book Steph is reading.
I have to warn all y'all: the cut-and-paste clipping style is, to me, distracting. You know how we often talk about fonts and the impact they have, etc.? This is like that, because it's more than just different fonts; it's different sizes (radically so, some times), some pages have illustrations from magazine, and even each page number is a clipping (also radically different from each other).
It's a credit to the author that the story is compelling enough that I'm following it and quite absorbed in it, but I know that if it were typeset in the standard way, I'd have finished it LONG ago.
ION, I have to say that the one good thing about driving to the beach for vacation (despite it being a 10- to 12-hour drive) is that I don't have to worry about airline luggage weight allowances, and I can therefore bring as many books as I want (much to The Boy's chagrin).
That's my idea of a perfect vacation: a house right on the beach, with tons of books. (The addition of The Boy's ENTIRE family [including his parents -- yikes!] scales it back down from "perfect" to "probably will be quite nice as long as I don't kill people for always being up in my bidness.")
They made you wear name tags at a wedding?
Yes. And we had lists of people we were supposed to meet.
What did yours say?
What my nametag always says: my name in integral form. Along with my LJ name, which I had written upside down, not having written it initially.
What the heck kind of wedding was this???
An AWESOME wedding. Look for the LJ writeup soon. I never did figure out how she knew the bride and/or the groom, but I'm sure I can find out.
I'm jealous, it sounds very cool! Also, jealous cause I'd love to meet her, I love the Smart Bitches!
She would make a good Buffista! I saw her again at brunch today. We discussed how small her fists are, and she put hers in someone's mouth. And I made her laugh, which pleased me.
None of the reviews I've read had the same problem, though, so it could be just me.
You missed my review, then. I also thought the ending, with
Marcus solving his problems by telling his parents the truth and having adult connections and power step in to fix things,
rather completely undercut all the points Doctorow was trying to make about the power of youth and distributed revolution.
Also, Doctorow got the US Constitution completely wrong. No way could
the Governor kick DHS out of the state. There's a thing called the Supremacy clause.
I also have Knut's book in my hands, haven't cracked it yet.
I just finished Kate Elliott's latest, Shadow Gate, and I'm baffled to find that either she's writing a fantasy crossover with an earlier SF novel series, or she just really loves re-using cultures she invented twenty years ago. Very odd.