Giles: Stop that, you two. Riley: He started it... Xander: He called me a bad name! I think it was bad; it might have been Latin.

'Selfless'


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 07, 2008 12:39:37 pm PDT #6898 of 28385
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

I have read Nora since I read my mom's "Irish Thoroughbred" (I know Plei has horsey issues with...) and have always read and really enjoyed a huge amount of her novels.

Reading her on SBTN has just upped the total-Nora love; she's just really, really cool and nice and no-shit, and my god, how can anyone write that much?

One of the things I SO enjoy about the internet is how it can connect you, even superficially (but also profoundly), with people you never, never, NEVER would have contact with without it.

I realize this is not an earthshakingly new realization, but I think it's so interesting. I grew up a phone and letter-girl, went to college as computers-as-communication-tool were coming in, and now, there's a whole generation who has never been unable to instantly contact whoever they want, via text or net. There are con's, I know, but IMO, it's almost all win.


Amy - Aug 07, 2008 12:50:01 pm PDT #6899 of 28385
Because books.

Nora is a seriously cool woman. Not even an ounce of bullshit there.


P.M. Marc - Aug 07, 2008 12:52:49 pm PDT #6900 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

Dude. Even before the Internets, it was NOT THAT HARD to figure out the various horse racing CC & Rs and procedures. IT WAS NOT.

There is NO excuse for that book. NONE.

Wow. Yep. Still angry with the thing. HA!


sumi - Aug 07, 2008 12:55:23 pm PDT #6901 of 28385
Art Crawl!!!

Hee.


sumi - Aug 07, 2008 12:59:01 pm PDT #6902 of 28385
Art Crawl!!!

BTW, I just read bad news about Princess Rooney. She's been diagnosed with EPM.


P.M. Marc - Aug 07, 2008 1:05:56 pm PDT #6903 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

Poor thing. Wow. She's 28?

Time flies.


sumi - Aug 07, 2008 1:27:51 pm PDT #6904 of 28385
Art Crawl!!!

I know!


Consuela - Aug 07, 2008 8:17:54 pm PDT #6905 of 28385
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

I have always suspected she compares every man to her true love, Francis Crawford of Lymond, and finds him wanting.

Oh, so true, Ginger. And yet if you don't read Lymond at that age (pre-17, I suspect), you don't get the full impact. Or, well, you shouldn't I think. Like the golden age of SF is 13, the golden age of the Lymond Chronicles is 15.

I know Nutty read the first one and bounced hard off the character, for reasons which struck me as entirely fair--but I'm glad I didn't wait until I had a mature and critical-analytical mind to read them.


Kathy A - Aug 07, 2008 9:14:27 pm PDT #6906 of 28385
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

My favorite thing about Nora Roberts is her ability to write believable male characters. So many romance authors have a hard time coming up with convincing heroes, whereas she's able to produce guys similar to ones I know in close guy relationships as well as romantic ones.


Ginger - Aug 08, 2008 3:21:59 am PDT #6907 of 28385
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

At her constant urging, I did read A Game of Kings and I have the rest of the Lymond Chronicles. I enjoyed it, but I realized it needed the kind of concentration, attention span and uninterrupted reading time I had at 15. I'm now saving them until I retire and can spend uninterrupted days with them. I think the golden age of LotR is also 15-20.