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."
I would think that, if they wanted to cast those girls, they could just make the movie of Ramona Quimby, Age 8, which is just as well-known a book as Beezus and Ramona, and has a bunch of scenes that would make good movie. That's the one with the egg in the hair and the cat song, right?
ION: Harry Potter, Zionist propaganda. Including "promoting the purity of blood and race." Missing the point much? [link]
You can't go sixties, beth? Because Wrinkle in Time is still so relevant yet very much of its time.
I will be , but I have to read a book from each decade with a couple of matching honor books -- this week the 20s and lot of back ground stuff. Next week 30s, 40s, 50s.
I like historical fiction. I've neither pursued nor avoided romance. Should I read Diana Gabaldon's Outlander novels?
I think you'd enjoy them, Laga. They're very long, but well written and truly interesting.
I will say if you're a history wonk, the second one, Dragonfly in Amber is the one where she got most carried away with her historical research, in that "My research! Let me show you every detail!" sort of way.
For me, it was a little intrusive into the storytelling, but it's the only one of the books in which it's a huge issue for me.
Oh, and if you get started with them, Book 7 does come out later this year (I think).
She has admitted that she'd never been to Scotland until she was writing the third book. And what's so funny is that I loved the first two.
Once they left Europe for the New World, I sort of lost interest. Especially since she'd never been to North Carolina when she wrote about *it*, either. I'm more familiar than I'd wish with Rowan County, and it is definitely NOT in the mountains. It was more about my losing interest in the storytelling that she lost me, though. Again, I loved the first one, and most of the second.
Especially since she'd never been to North Carolina when she wrote about *it*, either. I'm more familiar than I'd wish with Rowan County, and it is definitely NOT in the mountains.
Yeah, that drove me nuts too. There's only so much hand-waving one can do.
I have read the later books though, mostly because I'm Roger MacKenzie's bitch. He's my ideal hero.
The romance in the Outlander series isn't the typical romance and there is a large cast of characters (occasionally too large) but it can be interesting at times. And occasionally it's a bit over the top, but it's good story telling.
I read the first two one right after another, and then never picked up the next one -- I think I read them too close together. I keep meaning to pick them up - I just haven't.
Ok, and I thought I'd crossed rather a personal border when I was planning to buy Dominic West's coffee cup at his moving-out-of-Balmer sale.(He ended up going back to London without doing it, so I'm not sure if I'd give in to "OMG, he touched it!!1" or not), but if I were a teen and someone wanted my clothes, I'd think they were going to tie me up in throw me in their van.
But then, as now, I was a procedural junkie, so maybe every young miss would not be thinking this.