Gunn: Well, how horrible is this thing? Lorne: I haven't read the Book of Revelations lately, but if I was searching for adjectives, I'd probably start there.

'Hell Bound'


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."


Seska (the Watcher-in-Training) - Jul 18, 2009 7:36:07 am PDT #9634 of 28402
"We're all stories, in the end. Just make it a good one, eh?"

Oh yes, she's well known here. I loved 'Moondial' as a child - I think it was adapted for children's TV.


flea - Jul 18, 2009 7:38:54 am PDT #9635 of 28402
information libertarian

I loved her Bagthorpe books. I think the first in the series is Absolute Zero (which is the name of the family dog). I think Emmett might like them, actually. The are sort of intellectual-wacky and not action-wacky, but good and wacky.


DavidS - Jul 18, 2009 7:39:24 am PDT #9636 of 28402
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Oh yes, she's well known here. I loved 'Moondial' as a child - I think it was adapted for children's TV.

She wrote a great deal for television, particularly in the eighties.

Would that American fantasy writers had such patronage.


Volans - Jul 18, 2009 7:48:10 am PDT #9637 of 28402
move out and draw fire

Any good recs for a collection of traditional fairy tales, and/or King Arthur stories? For a 4yo listener?

We've got lots of "actual" King Arthur (Malory, etc), and original Grimm, but no simple short versions of the basics.


Beverly - Jul 18, 2009 8:50:45 am PDT #9638 of 28402
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

T.H. White, Raq?

Quartet of novels by T.H. White, published in a single volume in 1958. The quartet comprises The Sword in the Stone (1938), The Queen of Air and Darkness--first published as The Witch in the Wood (1939)--The Ill-Made Knight (1940), and The Candle in the Wind (published in the composite volume, 1958). The series is a retelling of the Arthurian legend, from Arthur's birth to the end of his reign, and is based largely on Sir Thomas Malory's Le Morte Darthur. After White's death, a conclusion to The Once and Future King was found among his papers; it was published in 1977 as The Book of Merlyn.

Or the Tennyson, for reading aloud.

ETA: Neither of which are particularly short, sorry.

My favorite book of fairy tales when I was growing up is now out of print, but still findable--Fifty Famous Fairy Stories, by Bruno Frost. My favorite interpretation of some standard fairy tales is Robin McKinley's A Door in the Hedge. She has a knack for the retelling, giving the characters life and the situations some plausibility, and her language is lovely. Not immediately accessible to a four-year-old, but lovely to read aloud, and to have read to you.


Seska (the Watcher-in-Training) - Jul 18, 2009 9:00:33 am PDT #9639 of 28402
"We're all stories, in the end. Just make it a good one, eh?"

She wrote a great deal for television, particularly in the eighties.

Yep, scripts for such children's television gems as 'Five Children and It', and her own writing was adapted for TV too (as was the case with 'Moondial', which was her own novel). Some really great fantasy there.


Volans - Jul 18, 2009 11:00:52 am PDT #9640 of 28402
move out and draw fire

Thanks, Bev - we've got the T.H. White, so I'll give that a shot and see how it goes. I have a few of the Tennyson poems in other collections, but I think I'll get that book to add to the Camelot shelf anyway.

I am highly amused that "customers who purchased Idylls of the King also purchased Shane".


DavidS - Jul 18, 2009 12:43:44 pm PDT #9641 of 28402
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

There's a biography about Hope Mirrlees coming out.

Lovely picture - you can see why Virginia Woolf described her as: “her own heroine — capricious, exacting, exquisite, very learned, and beautifully dressed.”


Jesse - Jul 18, 2009 5:05:39 pm PDT #9642 of 28402
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Thanks to you people, I bought the Girl with a Dragon Tattoo last night. I'd actually given it as a gift, but never read it myself!


Kat - Jul 19, 2009 10:36:55 am PDT #9643 of 28402
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

Ooooh. Jesse! So enjoyable.

I'm reading The Story of Edgar Sawtelle now. Not very far in, but enjoyable enough. Not at the Girl with a Dragon Tattoo level.

Can I also fess up? I find the statistics about abuse at the beginning of each section totally creepy.