Speaking of goth and black birds, Ted Hughes' book Crow is quite goth indeedy.
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."
"Everybody Loves Raymond," totally cyberpunk.
HA.
Wasn't the aria used in Fifth Element from Lucia di Lammermoor?
It is indeed. (Of course I have it favorited in YouTube - it most awesome.)
thank you! I've always wondered about that.
the aria used in Fifth Element
I was so happy with that until they decided to go techno with it.
I just saw this on Neil Gaiman's blog, and I thought it might produce some interesting conversation. It's Entertainment Weekly’s list of the 100 most important books since 1983. The list seems kind of random to me. I’ve only read about 10 of the books, but I have a bunch more of them on my shelves.
Looks like classic means popular. I always thought that classic meant -- something that stood the test of time, something that no matter how foreign something was,there would be something you can relate to. Also, it should have some meat to it -- something that causes discussion.Not sure that eat,pray, love or Da vinci Code could pass either of those test.
I thought it was "the best reads"
I've read 22 of them, which seems like a lot (considering I don't think I read that much, and especially not much mainstream fiction). There were also a bunch where I've read other books by the author, but not the one they picked.
I think that list was mostly fairly well-received (well-reviewed + sold well) mainstream writing.
the title said new classics - so that's where I got the word classics