Xander: Look who's got a bad case of Dark Prince envy. Dracula: Leave us. Xander: No, we're not going to "Leabbb you." And where'd you get that accent, Sesame Street? "One, Two, Three - three victims! Maw ha ha!"

'Lessons'


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."


beth b - Jul 25, 2009 8:34:57 am PDT #9718 of 28393
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

Ok so I did have nightmares last night -- not anything that was Actually part of the Strain , but related. And even though the worst night mare was this morning , the worst part of the night was where I kept dreaming that the putting in of the patio was a big part of the fight of good vs. evil. That was just stupid.


Fay - Jul 25, 2009 8:08:08 pm PDT #9719 of 28393
"Fuck Western ideologically-motivated gender identification!" Sulu gasped, and came.

Did we already know about The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland In A Ship Of Her Own Making?

Because I've only read the first chapter, but I am charmed to death.


Barb - Jul 26, 2009 3:42:38 am PDT #9720 of 28393
“Not dead yet!”

I need hivemind help. I'm trying to find a young adult novel I read, heaven knows when. I'm fairly certain I read it in junior high or high school, so it predates the 1980s and the setting for the book itself is either late 50s/early 60s. The lead character is a young half-Romany/gypsy girl who grows up in either Chicago or New York with her parents among the Romany community. After her white mother dies (the girl is about sixteen or seventeen at this point), her Romany father fulfills a promise he made to her that he'll take their daughter to get to know her maternal grandparents from whom mom has been mostly estranged. He takes her to stay with them in Wisconsin during one summer where she finds her grandfather welcoming and her grandmother cold and closed off and definitely embarrassed by her granddaughter's very gypsy-like exterior. She tells her if she's going to be staying with them, she'll have to put away the colorful clothes and jewelry and act like a respectable girl.

During this summer, she learns a lot about her parents, how her white mother came to run away with the gypsy boy, how her grandfather is extremely sympathetic to the Romany-- he's accepted as one of them-- at a time period where they were looked upon with deep suspicion as thieves and charlatans. In the meantime, our heroine has met a young local and is falling in love-- the Dark Moment of the book is when a fire breaks out at the family farm-- I'm fairly certain it was vandalism-- and she risks her life to save the animals in the barn. Afterward, her grandmother is very forgiving because of course, it was her Bad Attitude that prompted the vandalism and she nearly lost her granddaughter the way she lost her daughter, and the local boy proclaims his undying love and asks her to marry him (this is one reason I'm so certain it was set in the 50s/60s) and it all ends Happily Ever After.

You'd think if I could remember all these details, I could remember the freakin' title, but alas, no.

Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?


Sophia Brooks - Jul 26, 2009 6:39:30 am PDT #9721 of 28393
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

I do not know the title,but I am pretty sure I read it!


Steph L. - Jul 26, 2009 10:19:57 am PDT #9722 of 28393
this mess was yours / now your mess is mine

Did we already know about The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland In A Ship Of Her Own Making?

Fay, have you read Palimpsest? That's the novel that Fairyland comes from (although the author never intended to write Fairyland).

Anyway, I'm reading Fairyland, and it really is lovely.


Fay - Jul 27, 2009 4:05:39 am PDT #9723 of 28393
"Fuck Western ideologically-motivated gender identification!" Sulu gasped, and came.

I have not read Palimpsest, but I went to try to find it at my bookshop yesterday! Sadly it was not in stock. I printed out the info from the info-printy-outy-machine, and WAS going to go and order it, because it sounded so very much My Cup Of Tea from the website info. However, then my feet took me over to the comic book section, and I picked up Buffy Season 8 book 4, and LoEG: 1910, and The Umbrella Academy Book 1, and decided maybe I'd already spent enough for one day.

Was reflecting upon the events of Buffy 8 Book 3, and the death of Renne, and I'm torn, but I still kind of mostly want to smack Joss for that one, I think. Because, damn it, she's so very much shown as The Girlfriend, and then as The Dead Girlfriend, with her final thoughts being of Xander (rather than her mum, or whatever) and I did love the whole Dracula schtick very much indeed, for obvious reasons of slashiness, but I still pretty much hate that they basically just fridged her.

Ah well.

Man, I keep buying new books, and I have a MOUNTAIN - well, several mountains - of books yet unread, but I'm mostly just writing at the moment.

But Palimpsest is definitely on the list. (Hell, it's one of my very favourite words, for starters!)


Kat - Jul 29, 2009 5:43:56 pm PDT #9724 of 28393
"I keep to a strict diet of ill-advised enthusiasm and heartfelt regret." Leigh Bardugo

I am reading the most amazing book: The Selected Works of T. S. Spivet It's really really jawdroppingly awesome as is the website. Anyone read it?

(P.S. this is a perfect gift for a certain globehopping buffista)


Barb - Jul 31, 2009 8:56:15 am PDT #9725 of 28393
“Not dead yet!”

Oh, this is freakin' awesome! The new issue of Entertainment Weekly is devoted to vampires and they have a series of little interviews and short essays by many of the contemporary authors.

Stephenie Meyer: "In 2007, as Twilight propelled her from a surprise YA bestseller to a multigenerational superstar, she admitted to EW that she had never read Bram Stoker's Dracula. Reading other people's vampire stories made her too "neurotic," she explained. As a Mormon, Meyer doesn't watch R-rated movies, so that eliminated a whole other swatch of the canon. (She has seen bits of Interview With the Vampire and The Lost Boys on late-night TV. Her respective reviews "Yuck!" and "Creepy!")

Way to use that English Lit vocab, babe.

And Laurell K. Hamilton when asked her thoughts on the Twilight phenomenon: "Stephenie Meyer has come and she's taken the genre that I sort of pioneered."

REALLY? Then again, she's never had much of a kissing relationship with reality anyhow...

Charlaine Harris' essay is absolutely as charming as she is and Anne Rice is in surprisingly good form. Not too mad at all. At least, not when compared to Laurell and Stephenie.


Calli - Jul 31, 2009 8:57:47 am PDT #9726 of 28393
I must obey the inscrutable exhortations of my soul—Calvin and Hobbs

Not too mad at all. At least, not when compared to Laurell and Stephenie.

Way to set the bar looooooow.


Polter-Cow - Jul 31, 2009 9:13:20 am PDT #9727 of 28393
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

And Laurell K. Hamilton when asked her thoughts on the Twilight phenomenon: "Stephenie Meyer as come and she's taken the genre that I sort of pioneered."

...Pioneered? Really? I am not familiar enough with genre trends to factually dispute this claim.