Spike: Lots of fuss over one girl. Other things to do around here--important things. Angel: You know that whoosh thing you do when you're suddenly not there anymore? I love that.

'Unleashed'


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."


Sue - Sep 26, 2008 7:52:36 am PDT #7546 of 28404
hip deep in pie

The Awakening by Kate Chopin is not on the list.

I'm surprised by that too. There's no Margaret Atwood either.


Steph L. - Sep 26, 2008 7:54:01 am PDT #7547 of 28404
this mess was yours / now your mess is mine

If I get this, I just may get a pink cardigan in your honor, Teppy.

I won't hold you to that. But I have been known to have dreams that end up happening IRL, for no rational explanation (like, if I dreamed that Obama won the election, I wouldn't call myself a seer; and, frankly, you're such a good writer that you getting the job doesn't *isn't,* actually, a dream that's unexplainable).


megan walker - Sep 26, 2008 7:58:52 am PDT #7548 of 28404
"What kind of magical sunshine and lollipop world do you live in? Because you need to be medicated."-SFist

Actually I miscounted, I’ve read 20. Books I’ve read that I’d recommend: The Secret History, Persepolis, and Cold Comfort Farm. Books I’ve read that I hated: Madame Bovary, The Second Sex, and The Good Earth. I’ve tried to read both Possession and Sophie’s Choice, but ended up putting them down. Although I think I would really like Possession.


SuziQ - Sep 26, 2008 8:10:34 am PDT #7549 of 28404
Back tattoos of the mother is that you are absolutely right - Ame

But I have been known to have dreams that end up happening IRL, for no rational explanation

Would you have a dream that someone buys my house, despite the current economic mess?

Then maybe I can relax a bit and maybe read a couple of the books on that list.


Strega - Sep 26, 2008 8:15:04 am PDT #7550 of 28404

that list is another one of those, let's take a representative selection from each woman writer, throw in a few men writing about women, and call it an essential list.

Yeah, the fact that most of the books were suggestions from comments really shows. I mean, And Then There Were None is fun and all, but essential reading for women? And Angela's Ashes? Seriously?

There's stuff I'd quibble with on the The Esquire list, but nothing that seems quite so "I've lost the point and am just listing books I liked."


Connie Neil - Sep 26, 2008 8:27:43 am PDT #7551 of 28404
brillig

I won't hold you to that

I'll content myself with my turquoise pashmina, then.


Steph L. - Sep 26, 2008 8:30:49 am PDT #7552 of 28404
this mess was yours / now your mess is mine

I'll content myself with my turquoise pashmina, then.

That's much more your style than a pink cardigan -- even in the dream, I wondered why you were wearing it!


Connie Neil - Sep 26, 2008 8:34:58 am PDT #7553 of 28404
brillig

I wondered why you were wearing it!

Was it paired with rhinestone cat's-eye glasses?


Ginger - Sep 26, 2008 8:36:48 am PDT #7554 of 28404
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

This list is way too skewed for books that I suspect will be forgotten in 50 years.

Any list that doesn't have Sexual Politics or The Awakening is suspect. Other omissions: Jane Eyre, Vanity Fair, Moll Flanders, Uncle Tom's Cabin, Emily Dickinson, Sarah Orne Jewett and Charlotte Perkins Gilman.


Sue - Sep 26, 2008 8:41:59 am PDT #7555 of 28404
hip deep in pie

Jane Eyre was on there. But Emily Dickinson is a huge omission! I guess it was tending towards fiction, but Dorothy Parker was on there, who I think of mostly as a poet and a quipper.