Anya: We should drop a piano on her. It always works for that creepy cartoon rabbit when he's running from that nice man with the speech impediment. Giles: Yes, or perhaps we could paint a convincing fake tunnel on the side of a mountain.

'Touched'


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."


Strix - Aug 06, 2008 12:51:33 pm PDT #6847 of 28385
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

a copy of Meredith Pierce's Darkangel,

Oh! Yes, I read it obsessively!! And I quite agree; I read the sequel (I guess the 2nd book) and it was fine, but not as wonderful as #1. I don't think I ever read #3. Oh, I'm going to have to find that and re-read it, Fay. I haven't thought about it in YONKS.

I think at 14, I too was reading Auel...I think the first three books were out by 1986? and tons of Silhouette Desires, historical roms (I remember Bertrice Small and Constance O'Banyon and Johanna Linsdey were faves, although my sister and I can STILL crack each other up by injecting the phrases "Conn, Conn, stuff me till I burst!" and "Take me like the stallion takes my mare" from Small, which originated at roughly that time. Heh. "Conn..." Heh.

I have to leave a voice mail for my sister right now.

Also, I think I stole "Gone with the Wind" from the scholl lib at that age -- I still have it, along with Grimm's Fairy Tales, a ginormous unbowderlized version (I'ma go to hell.

Stephen King, esp. "It" which came out about then. Also, I remember I wrote a short horror story called "Harvest Moon" for frosh English which the teacher made me read aloud to the class.


Connie Neil - Aug 06, 2008 1:07:14 pm PDT #6848 of 28385
brillig

I'ma go to hell.

If you are, I'll be next to you, clutching the unabridged Count of Monte Cristo, which I was the only one to read in a ten-year period, so the school library didn't even deserve to have it.


Gadget_Girl - Aug 06, 2008 1:07:41 pm PDT #6849 of 28385
Just call me "Siouxsie Shunshine".

A boyfriend gave me a set of leather bound books when we ware in high school. My favorites of the set were the Grimm's Fairy Tales, Hans Christian Anderson Fairy Tales, complete Edgar Allan Poe and 5 Agatha Christie stories. The books were nicer than he turned out to be. I still have the books, too.


Gadget_Girl - Aug 06, 2008 1:10:25 pm PDT #6850 of 28385
Just call me "Siouxsie Shunshine".

I'ma go to hell.

I'll be there, too, holding my copy of Lord of the Flies and All Quiet on the Western Front. The second one I read for a US History assignment and kept forgetting to return.


Barb - Aug 06, 2008 1:16:11 pm PDT #6851 of 28385
“Not dead yet!”

I'ma go to hell.

Yeah, save me a seat on that bus, too. My first copy of Heartbreak Hotel came from the high school library. When that got lost, my second copy came from Florida State's library.

What? It had last been checked out something like ten years before I checked it out. I seriously doubt they're missing it to this day.


Gadget_Girl - Aug 06, 2008 1:19:35 pm PDT #6852 of 28385
Just call me "Siouxsie Shunshine".

I seriously doubt they're missing it to this day.

very true.

Two summers ago I found books up in the stacks at the Strozer that were marked "Florida Girls College" and hadn't been checked out since 1920. I felt like swiping a few of them just to give them a change of scenery and because they really looked interesting.


Dana - Aug 06, 2008 1:20:25 pm PDT #6853 of 28385
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

Erin, I would recommend not reading the final book of that trilogy. I'm not sure Meredith Ann Pierce can write trilogies. I tend to love the first book, think the second is okay, and end up going WTF? at the third.


DavidS - Aug 06, 2008 1:34:00 pm PDT #6854 of 28385
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Interesting tidbit about Dark Angel gleaned from wikipedia:

Published in 1982, The Darkangel featured a story that Pierce claims came to her all at once while she read the account of a dream recounted to Carl Jung,


Barb - Aug 06, 2008 2:04:39 pm PDT #6855 of 28385
“Not dead yet!”

Two summers ago I found books up in the stacks at the Strozer that were marked "Florida Girls College" and hadn't been checked out since 1920. I felt like swiping a few of them just to give them a change of scenery and because they really looked interesting.

BWAH!!!! Setting up the Old Books Home


Susan W. - Aug 06, 2008 3:29:17 pm PDT #6856 of 28385
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

John Jakes

Ooh, I'd forgotten all about John Jakes! I used to glom those, too. I was a sucker for historical sagas--Belva Plain, Alexandra Ripley, Celeste de Blasis.

I had an event over on main campus today which ended late enough I could reasonably say there was no point in going back to the hospital...so naturally I went to the library to get some research materials for the WIP. All of which I intend to return eventually, though I do love the long checkout periods and near-infinite renewals at a university library.

And I know I've mentioned this before, but is there anything in the world that smells as wonderful as the stacks of a university library, that old book scent?