No, no, no, sir. No more chick pit for you. Come on.

Riley ,'Lessons'


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."


Kat - Aug 19, 2008 5:57:40 pm PDT #6991 of 28388
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

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?!


beth b - Aug 19, 2008 6:56:23 pm PDT #6992 of 28388
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

Actually, really glad about the review in EW. I was talking with a library patron today that has read all the books and enjoyed them all -- but the last one she did not find appropriate for her 12 yr old son. ( who is probably reading twilight because it is going to be a movie). Between this mom and the EW review I was able to give a co-worker some info she could use to talk to her daughter -- who is only 13.She isn't going to try and stop her.

Actually , the mom that I talked to -- said the worst part about Breaking dawn was that everyone got exactly what t they wanted at the end


P.M. Marc - Aug 19, 2008 7:48:32 pm PDT #6993 of 28388
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

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

Nah, that's a totally fair assessment, as one who has read his novels.


Toddson - Aug 20, 2008 3:37:04 am PDT #6994 of 28388
Friends don't let friends read "Atlas Shrugged"

I'm surprised the Breaking Dawn fans didn't decide to send sparkles.

Perhaps the recipients should be grateful for small favors.


Tom Scola - Aug 20, 2008 7:21:50 am PDT #6995 of 28388
Remember that the frontier of the Rebellion is everywhere. And even the smallest act of insurrection pushes our lines forward.

Selections From H.P. Lovecraft's Brief Tenure as a Whitman's Sampler Copywriter.


DavidS - Aug 20, 2008 7:25:36 am PDT #6996 of 28388
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

"What is toffee exactly?"


beth b - Aug 20, 2008 3:01:46 pm PDT #6997 of 28388
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

I finished Wicked Lovely last night -- and I know a couple of people reccomended it - Thank you. Seriously, it ought to hook most of the Twilight crowd because it is so romantic. but with a number of strong female characters

Perfect


Barb - Aug 21, 2008 4:01:52 pm PDT #6998 of 28388
“Not dead yet!”

Jilli, a review from the latest Publisher's Weekly that might be of interest:

The Dracula Dossier by James Reese

In Reese's scrupulously imagined thriller, told largely through entries from a lost journal kept by the author of Dracula in 1888, Bram Stoker attends an indoctrination ceremony of the Order of the Golden Dawn, at the behest of Oscar Wilde's mum and a young William Butler Yeats. The ceremony goes horribly awry, resulting in one participant—Francis Tumblety, a patent medicine salesman newly arrived from America—becoming a vessel for the evil Egyptian god Set and applying his surgical skills to the slaughter of Whitechapel prostitutes in order to draw Stoker out for a supernatural showdown.

Bestseller Reese (The Witchery) so perfectly pastiches the journal format that initially, his story reads as dry and boringly as most private diaries. With Tumblety's malignant conversion, though, the novel turns into a rip-roaring penny dreadful that compels reading to the end. Dracula fans will apreciate the nods to well-known works that Stoker wrote supposedly follwoing this confrontation. (Oct.)


Kat - Aug 21, 2008 5:10:09 pm PDT #6999 of 28388
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

Has anyone read Tana French's book In the Woods ? I finished it late last night and thought it was frantabulous.


Atropa - Aug 21, 2008 5:22:31 pm PDT #7000 of 28388
The artist formerly associated with cupcakes.

Jilli, a review from the latest Publisher's Weekly that might be of interest:

The Dracula Dossier by James Reese

Hmmm. It sounds interesting, but I'm always a bit wary of books that try to combine Dracula and anything like Jack the Ripper. Because honestly, none of them are going to top Anno Dracula by Kim Newman. But, I'm sure I'll end up picking up The Dracula Dossier. Because I'm predictable like that.