Cool! I know that the underground house on Plum Creek is long gone (I don't even think a depression is left in the bank), but there should be some tourist-y things to do there.
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."
Cool! I know that the underground house on Plum Creek is long gone (I don't even think a depression is left in the bank), but there should be some tourist-y things to do there.
I remember reading that you can go visit where the underground house used to be -- the people who own the land have a path and a sign there.
Looking for Ann of Green Gables: The Story of L. M. Montgomery and Her Literary Classic.
Which contains a link to Oops! NY Times reviews which were completely off the mark on enduring classics.
Joss Whedon is among the 'experts' used in the trailer for Brad Meltzer's upcoming title, Book of Lies.
Which sounds pretty cool. I didn't know he wrote novels.
Meltzer? Yeah. He writes thrillers. They're so-so. Amusing fanboy moments (chacters with obscure-ish comic book names), less amusing gender issue stuff (needs a whap with a clue stick at times), writing varying between the solid and the clunky, but never hitting sublime.
Rucka's novels are better.
Rucka's novels are better.
Of course they are.
::drifting off into haze of Rucka nostalgia::
I know this one! Gotham Central, right? Batman meets H:LOTS(almost)
Which sounds pretty cool. I didn't know he wrote novels.
There's a preview for Book of Lies at the end of the latest issue of Angel (whichever issue we're up to by now). It seems...intriguing, but I'd rather read it as a comic. I'm not crazy about his writing style. It's a little too Dan Brown at times for me. t edit Okay, I'm basing that solely on the preview snippet I read, and nothing else, but it still packed a lot of heavy-handed description into a few preview pages.
Holy SHIT. The Crazy continues. From TwilightMoms:
For Roswell fans, it was hot sauce sent to the WB Studios that kept the show on the air.
For the Writer’s Guild, it was mail bins full of pencils that sent a message to the company executives.
Now, it’s up to Stephenie Meyer’s fans to show their support for a great writer and an amazing book series.
Entertainment Weekly, the same magazine that put Twilight on the cover and gave us articles about the movie, the actors and the author gave “Breaking Dawn” a “D” rating. That’s right; a “D”!
How are we going to send a message of support and show Entertainment Weekly that they’re wrong? By starting The White Queen Project!
Grab any white chess pieces that you have and send them (one at a time or all at once) with a letter (if you like) to:
GAH! There is something so different from trying to save a show (which can be sort of crazy) and showing support for striking workers and disagreeing with a review. WTF?!