Question: Will hiding in a cavern with stockpiled chocolate goods be any part of this plan?

Xander ,'Get It Done'


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."


Topic!Cindy - Jun 20, 2006 3:33:26 am PDT #689 of 28061
What is even happening?

Is it online, Corwood? I went to harpers.org and didn't find it, but I've only had a cup of coffee. Google is being similarly stingey with the love.


Hayden - Jun 20, 2006 6:09:54 am PDT #690 of 28061
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

It doesn't look like it's online yet. Harpers.org still has last month's cover up on the current issue page (way to keep current, guys!), and I can't seem to find it elsewhere, either. Definitely worth a read, although this issue isn't one of the standouts elsewhere.


Topic!Cindy - Jun 20, 2006 6:29:36 am PDT #691 of 28061
What is even happening?

Thanks. I'll keep an eye out for it. It sounds like it could be similar to other Robinson pieces I can find on line. I haven't looked at them in-depth, but I suspect I'm going to be nodding in agreement at least as often as I'm thinking, "But no, wait..." Theologically speaking, I'm actually pretty conservative, but how I think that should play out leaves me somewhat of an orphan in all sorts of arenas.


Hayden - Jun 20, 2006 7:22:56 am PDT #692 of 28061
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

Hey, that's why I want to hear your perspective.


Hayden - Jun 20, 2006 10:43:10 am PDT #693 of 28061
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

New Pynchon book in the works.


meara - Jun 21, 2006 1:59:05 pm PDT #694 of 28061

So anyone reading/read the latest Kushiel book? I'm about 3/4 done now...


justkim - Jun 21, 2006 4:12:41 pm PDT #695 of 28061
Another social casualty...

I finished Kushiel's Scion over the weekend. I liked it. It did what I needed and expected to do, which was provide with an excuse to revisit a favorite place. It doesn't compare to my deep love for the first series (especially Kushiel's Dart ), but I was surprised by how easily I was able to accept this as Imriel's story. I appreciated that I didn't anticipate parts of the plot.

Carey has some stylistic touches (continuous repetition of choice phrases) that tend to drive me nuts. I thought she had grown past them throughout the first trilogy, but I noticed them here and it occasionally took me out of the story. Maybe I had just gotten used to the style over the course of the first three books and stopped letting it bug me.

I missed Phedre and Joscelin though.


meara - Jun 21, 2006 6:14:47 pm PDT #696 of 28061

I found it odd (not reallly a spoiler) that since her voice was so similar in this one as in the Phedre ones, in some ways, that it didn't feel that different. Which doesn't sound like what i mean. Um. Imriel. Boy. V. different from Phedre. All that jazz. And yet, Carey's voice is so overpowering...but I LIKE it, so not *really* a problem, just a little odd. Generally did enjoy it, though not as much as the original books (or rather, the original book--the other two got a bit too freaky for me in places, though always interesting). This one was....easier. Which made it slightly less interesting, but I so continue to love the world she's created...Next time, more kinky sex!!

I wonder when the next book will come out. The first three seemed to come out pretty quickly, but I hate to hope "quickly" and then have them suck because they were written fast!


Frankenbuddha - Jun 22, 2006 3:41:54 am PDT #697 of 28061
"We are the Goon Squad and we're coming to town...Beep! Beep!" - David Bowie, "Fashion"

Picked up copies of Anthony Bourdain's THE NASTY BITS (basically an anthology of short pieces) and Bill Burford's HEAT.

Read several of the Bourdain pieces, which are amusing as usual, though he's mellowed a bit, and last night started in on the Burford, which is more of straight narrative. Just from the opening where Burford describes how he met Mario Batali, decided to go work for him, and also gives a bit of background on Batali's life and career, Malto Mario already makes Bourdain look like a piker in the excessive living department, which I find hella amusing.


Connie Neil - Jun 23, 2006 2:56:07 pm PDT #698 of 28061
brillig

I like the fact that Bourdain's show on Travel Channel comes with a parental warning. Must be all the drinking and smoking and snarking at Rachael Ray.