1) Kiefer Sutherland?
2) Who the hell is Hickory?
3) I am amused that they turned Blackberry into a girl. Because if one must have a Strong Female Character--and one must--at the very least choose the brainy one. Brainy people are girly anyway.
Fuffy ,'Storyteller'
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."
1) Kiefer Sutherland?
2) Who the hell is Hickory?
3) I am amused that they turned Blackberry into a girl. Because if one must have a Strong Female Character--and one must--at the very least choose the brainy one. Brainy people are girly anyway.
And, of course, it's one of the books Sawyer is passing the time with on LOST.
It's also used in Donnie Darko (director's cut).
Another really cool book that gave me delicious chills is "A Night in the Lonesome October," by Roger Zelazny. Jack the Ripper's dog is the narrator. Jack is trying to save the world and has a very good reason for doing what he's doing. Sherlock Holmes is in there, and Lovecraft's world, and a plethora of horror movie stuff.
It's a wonderful book.
After reading some of today's conversation, I had a doubletake moment at the library today when a patron asked me to help him locate Watership Down. I wanted so badly to say, "Oh! I was just talking about that book today with the invisible people on the internet!" but I think I just kept it to "Oh, that's a really good book."
That person was a pre-Buffista, KateP.
You should have come on to him. The sex would have been epic.
Also, Jane Harrocks was in the TV series.
What's really interesting is that John Hurt played Hazel in the movie, but Gen. Woundwart in the show.
Who the hell is Hickory?
One of the farmhands in The Wizard of Oz, as far as I am concerned.
t /all about me
Anyone for a round of golf with a couple of Irish writers?
That was excellent.
Today's library haul:
The Complete Adventures of Winnie the Pooh because I've never read all of them and feel I simply must.
The Blue Girl and Looking for Alaska because they were both recommended YA fiction on Amazon, and seem to have very different premises (one is fantasy, the other one is... not. I think.)
And, finally:
Foucalt's Pendulum because... you guys were talking about it.
Of course, I'm about 60% of the way through The Mists of Avalon, a depth that has taken me well more than a week to reach, so I may not start any of these for a while. But still. Happy. Books.