Kaylee: Is that him? Mal: That's the buffet table. Kaylee: Well how can we be sure, unless we question it?

'Shindig'


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."


Gus - Jun 28, 2006 11:06:35 am PDT #858 of 28067
Bag the crypto. Say what is on your mind.

Harvard, Yale, MIT and Stanford were pipe dreams before the US was founded.


§ ita § - Jun 28, 2006 11:14:17 am PDT #859 of 28067
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I enjoyed reading The Da Vinci Code merely because of the number of times I stopped and exclaimed to my mother "And now guess what they're doing! Guess! Idiots."

Someone had given it to her as a Christmas gift on that vacation, and I snagged it because I'd seen a few people on the beach reading it. I have no idea if she bothered with it when I was done breaking it down.


Aims - Jun 28, 2006 11:19:25 am PDT #860 of 28067
Shit's all sorts of different now.

Reading Anne of Green Gables for the first time. My grandmother had always (and still does) scoffed at my reading choices which were usually teen romance, ie Sweet Valley High and the like. I was also obsessed with those kids-dying-of-leukemia books (I mean, really? What demographic were those for?). I watched the first run of the Megan Follows movie on Wonderworks on PBS and saw the book in a bookstore. I picked it up and grandmother saw I was interested in something decent for once, and bought it on the spot. I read it all in one day, laying on my sailboat in Lake Michigan. She eventually bought all eight books for me. And, I'm rereading them right now.


Strega - Jun 28, 2006 11:21:06 am PDT #861 of 28067

Where the pleasure of the reading that particular work is so great and so closely allied in your mind with the physical details of the experience.

Hm. I don't think my brain files things this way. I remember "oh, I stayed up till dawn reading this" or "this passed the time on a cross-country flight" but those are anecdotes that happen to feature a book, not things I'd reminisce about the next time I read it.

I guess I keep my physical and intellectual pleasures segregated. For their own protection. If my surroundings are remarkable, I'm going to have a hard time concentrating on a book, and if the book's remarkable, I won't register my surroundings.


§ ita § - Jun 28, 2006 11:30:14 am PDT #862 of 28067
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Don't you have any accidental conflations? I can't eat almond cookies without thinking about reading 1984 or vice versa. They're not remarkable...but they're locked together.

And there's a certain album and a certain book that are linked too--but I can't remember either of them. If I could, I'd remember the other. Both drowned in Katrina, so no bookshelf browsing to help me out.


Gus - Jun 28, 2006 11:41:23 am PDT #863 of 28067
Bag the crypto. Say what is on your mind.

I can not get with Strega. The whole of a first reading is with me forever. It was hot, the day Shelley wished me to first appreciate her Monster. I loved the coolth of her words and her monster, frozen there in the ice.

It was cool.


erikaj - Jun 28, 2006 11:47:23 am PDT #864 of 28067
Always Anti-fascist!

I am officially a disgusting person. Because it took me two reads to get that Gus was talking about "Frankenstein", which I've never finished, and not a make-out story. ETA: The first time I read a Pelecanos, I didn't like it and thought my mom was out of her mind for bringing it to me. Because it had the awful review on the cover that said it was like Pulp Fiction in some overhyped way, and I waited for that part, and, nsm.


Polter-Cow - Jun 28, 2006 11:51:19 am PDT #865 of 28067
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

It's possible he made out with the book.


Nutty - Jun 28, 2006 11:53:35 am PDT #866 of 28067
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

I remember finishing Daniel Deronda in the evening after a day of rambling about the windy Mount Auburn Cemetary, looking for ancestors. (Also Bernard Malamud, and Isabella Stewart Gardner.) It was a lunar eclipse, and I was almost done with the novel, and even though it wasn't what I had wanted or expected it to be -- it suffers from its age terribly -- it was still a portrait of worthwhile subjectivities.

I also read a fair portion of Ivanhoe on a beach, hardly realizing till I started it that, in fact, Sir Walter Scott is perfect beach-reading!


erikaj - Jun 28, 2006 11:53:54 am PDT #867 of 28067
Always Anti-fascist!

Believe me, there are some I'd consider. I have a crush on David Simon because of the mid-section of "A Year On The Killing Streets".