Y'all see the man hanging out of the spaceship with the really big gun? Now I'm not saying you weren't easy to find. It was kinda out of our way, and he didn't want to come in the first place. Man's lookin' to kill some folk. So really it's his will y'all should worry about thwarting.

Mal ,'Safe'


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."


Volans - Jun 18, 2006 10:34:54 pm PDT #677 of 28061
move out and draw fire

I think the full effect of Foucault's builds with the overall arc, but there are some definite snarky bits, like the part where they prove that the measurements of a kiosk add up to the square root of the distance to the sun, or some such.

So, I finally finished Strange and Norrell. I'd bogged down hard, really losing patience with the writing, but once I was able to committ more than a couple hours to it, I found I really liked it. Funny and bittersweet.


Sophia Brooks - Jun 19, 2006 6:12:11 am PDT #678 of 28061
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

Did anyone watch the "new" Miss Marple mystery, which was an adaptation of "By the Pricking of my Thumbs"? They included Miss Marple and Tommy and Tuppance Beresford, which I can't remember if it was that way in the book. They also seemed to make Tuppance an alcoholic (she even had a flask!), which I remember not at all!

Am I craxy, or were these things in the book and I just missed them (I read most of the Christie oeuvre from age 11-13)


sumi - Jun 19, 2006 6:20:09 am PDT #679 of 28061
Art Crawl!!!

Okay, I haven't read the book but was excited to see Tommy and Tuppence with Miss Marple.


Sophia Brooks - Jun 19, 2006 6:22:50 am PDT #680 of 28061
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

Oh I was very excited to see Tommy and Tuppence and Miss Marple, too! I HEART Tommy and Tuppence. I was just kerfuzzled.


erikaj - Jun 19, 2006 6:30:09 am PDT #681 of 28061
I'm a fucking amazing catch!--Fiona Gallagher, Shameless(US)

wow...there's one I don't know. I'm surprised. Oh, and somebody tell me the world doesn't need a Tommy and Tuppence crossover Wooster story because suddenly I have an urge.


sumi - Jun 19, 2006 6:38:35 am PDT #682 of 28061
Art Crawl!!!

No, the world ABSOLUTELY needs a Tommy and Tuppence/Wooster X-Over.


Sophia Brooks - Jun 19, 2006 6:40:19 am PDT #683 of 28061
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

I think the world, generally, just needs more Tommy and Tuppence. I actually love then more than I love Nick and Nora, actually.


Jesse - Jun 19, 2006 6:41:21 am PDT #684 of 28061
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

I think the world, generally, just needs more Tommy and Tuppence. I actually love then more than I love Nick and Nora, actually.

Me too! It probably helps being exposed to them at a young age.


Kathy A - Jun 19, 2006 7:32:25 am PDT #685 of 28061
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

Not Matt, but:

And I know they're, jeez, 70 years old, so I do understand that, and viewed in that light they're amazingly modern.

I'm a big fan of CL Moore, too (read "Shambleau" and the first two Jirel stories for the SF Feminist lit class I took in college), and this is what really struck me about them. "Shambleau," especially, is amazingly modern, considering it was written in, what, 1936? I really think Moore was at least 10-15 years ahead of her time in her style.

I like to think that the female writer in the ST:DS9 ep "Beyond the Stars" was based on her, or at least women like her--ones who had to hide their gender behind pseudonyms and androgynous pennames, but who had talent to spare. (James Tiptree, Jr., aka Alice Sheldon, was remarkably talented, even though most of her stories/books end up being strident feminist tracts--"Houston, We Have a Problem" was the one I read for that class, and most of us students had serious issues with her anti-male attitude.)


Fred Pete - Jun 19, 2006 7:42:57 am PDT #686 of 28061
Ann, that's a ferret.

I really think Moore was at least 10-15 years ahead of her time in her style.

At least. And in the '40s, she and Henry Kuttner (her husband) had what may have been the truest partnership in all of literature.