Death is your art. You make it with your hands day after day. That final gasp, that look of peace. And part of you is desperate to know: What's it like? Where does it lead you? And now you see, that's the secret. Not the punch you didn't throw or the kicks you didn't land. She really wanted it. Every Slayer has a death wish. Even you.

Spike ,'Conversations with Dead People'


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."


Gris - Aug 06, 2008 7:30:56 pm PDT #6868 of 28385
Hey. New board.

At 14, I was well into my Star Wars novel phase. I read... a lot of them. Many of them several times. I was very dorky. At the time. I'm not anymore. Really.

I also read Great Expectations, A Separate Peace, and The Lord of the Flies in English that year, and loved them all. Especially Great Expectations. Everybody else in my class read an abridged version that was included in our textbook, but I went out and bought the full version, and still finished it three weeks before the end of the unit. LOVED it. Still do.

I think I've read Darkangel, but it completely didn't stick in my head. I'll have to find it in my books and read it again.


sumi - Aug 06, 2008 7:33:04 pm PDT #6869 of 28385
Art Crawl!!!

Dana - BWAH! to that third book white font. How silly.


Fay - Aug 06, 2008 7:38:54 pm PDT #6870 of 28385
"Fuck Western ideologically-motivated gender identification!" Sulu gasped, and came.

Oh, I know - the third book is indeed mader than a barrel of monkeys on acid in that respect - I don't think that abandoning the fairytale logic and trying to turn it into 'proper' scifi was a good call. But I don't mind, really - because I read The Dark Angel 20 years ago, and only read A Gathering of Gargoyles and The Pearl of the Soul of the World this year - so they do feel like crackfic to me. Like something added on, that's interesting but doesn't really mesh with the original. (PotC:DMC and PotC:AWE, otoh, do a terrific job of expanding the original standalone movie into something much bigger, imho, without losing the charm or strength of the original along the way. ymmv.)


P.M. Marc - Aug 06, 2008 8:35:12 pm PDT #6871 of 28385
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

14 was a mix of Analog magazine, RAH, Various Other Sci-Fi Authors (I think that was my year spent in Riverworld. Cough.), and...

Oh yes.

My year of Thomas Hardy. Whom I adored with all the adoration of my little black-clad, black-haired, 14 year old soul.

Mixed into all of this were whatever romances I could get on the cheap at Value Village and the other thrift stores, having discovered a year earlier that, wow! I could get, like 10 books for a buck! (I'd get a pile of 20 or 30 and be done in a day or two, due to being antisocial and reading fast.)

I *may* have started on my Regency Collection at that point. All I've really kept from it are my Baloghs. Though I loaned some out and can't remember where I loaned 'em out to, which makes me sad, because I think they were the classic ones that I might still like re-reading.


Susan W. - Aug 06, 2008 8:52:58 pm PDT #6872 of 28385
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

Though I loaned some out and can't remember where I loaned 'em out to, which makes me sad, because I think they were the classic ones that I might still like re-reading.

t runs down to basement bookshelf where books belonging to others are segregated.

Uh, that would be me. I have six of them. Next few days are kinda crazy, but I can get them back to you next week.


Ginger - Aug 07, 2008 3:56:52 am PDT #6873 of 28385
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

Everybody else in my class read an abridged version that was included in our textbook, but I went out and bought the full version

So did I! I'm afraid I was kind of a dick about it.

My BFF started on Dunnett at about that age, Consuela. I have always suspected she compares every man to her true love, Francis Crawford of Lymond, and finds him wanting.


Kathy A - Aug 07, 2008 6:03:01 am PDT #6874 of 28385
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

At some point between 12 and 16 I spent an entire summer reading my way through all of Christie that the library had

When I was in junior high, my mom signed us all up for an Agatha-Christie-Book-of-the-Month Club (black leather covers), until we got the whole set. It was very cool to go from the Nancy Drew club to Agatha Christie!


Fred Pete - Aug 07, 2008 6:09:25 am PDT #6875 of 28385
Ann, that's a ferret.

Who-dun-its were my transition from kids' books to grown-ups' books. I was big on Agatha Christie, Ellery Queen (right about the time of the Jim Hutton TV series), and Erle Stanley Gardner (in other words, Perry Mason).


Kathy A - Aug 07, 2008 6:16:09 am PDT #6876 of 28385
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

My brother had the complete Sherlock Holmes which I read in junior high--loved those! Actually, I think I'm going to have to pick them up at the bookstore this weekend (we have bargain classics on sale right now).


Sophia Brooks - Aug 07, 2008 6:20:14 am PDT #6877 of 28385
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

I forgot that I read Erle Stanley Gardiner and Ellery Queen, and also old copies of Ellery Queen's mystery Magazine. This was probably also about the time when I read the book Lucy, by Donald Johanson, about discovering the australopithicus skeleton. It also had a lot of soap opera worth antics between Louis, Richard and Mary Leakey. Fourteen was probably one of my biggest reading years, since it was the last summer before I worked, I had no friends who drove, and the library was down the street-- pretty much my whole day was spent reading and I read fast.