Early: Where'd she go? Simon: I can't keep track of her when she's not incorporeally possessing a space ship. Don't look at me.

'Objects In Space'


We're Literary 2: To Read Makes Our Speaking English Good  

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."


Lyra Jane - Dec 09, 2003 7:31:25 am PST #152 of 10002
Up with the sun

I liked the essays she has there about how she got started as a writer and her writing process.

I haven't been to her web site in years! I should go look for those.

She's one of the writers who has probably had the most influence on my prose style, if I can be pretentious enough to say I have one. (Shirley Jackson, Kurt Vonnegut, Lorrie Moore and Stephen King would be some of the others. It's an oddball list of influences, but you can't help the voices you hear in your head.)


Nutty - Dec 09, 2003 7:31:45 am PST #153 of 10002
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

Oh, the nostalgia! I read Snyder and that tearjerker of the 4th grade set, Willo Davis Roberts, a whole lot during one summer when I was a kid. (Also Alan Garner's Owl Service, of which I couldn't make heads or tails, and it wasn't till I was a grownup that I realized that it's just really hard to make heads or tails of him period.)

Black and Blue Magic and The Girl with the Silver Eyes were favorites of mine. Also, Snyder's lesser-known fantasy trilogy starting with Below the Root. I think that book was my introduction to the fact that books can be about ideas, not just about stories.

I don't remember when I started the Prydain books, but I was obsessed with Alexander's Westmark trilogy when I was in the 6th grade. (Also books about ideas, but also funny and character-driven.) Okay, I haven't read a book of Alexander's that I haven't liked.


Lyra Jane - Dec 09, 2003 7:34:16 am PST #154 of 10002
Up with the sun

Also, Snyder's lesser-known fantasy trilogy starting with Below the Root. I think that book was my introduction to the fact that books can be about ideas, not just about stories.

That was the one set of books of hers I was ever unable to finish. But I've never been a huge reader of fantasy -- I couldn't finish A Wrinkle in Time, either.


DavidS - Dec 09, 2003 7:34:34 am PST #155 of 10002
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

My brother, who generally does not like to read, has developed a love of Philip K. Dick and William Gibson in the last couple of years (he's 19 now).

Kate, I've read a lot of cyberpunk. Micole's suggestions are good, though I certainly would say there's a link between Dick and Gibson (who cites PKD as a major influence, as do all the cyberpunk writers). I'd highly recommend the anthology Storming The Reality Studio which is a very cool primer on the whole movement. Shorts stories and essays and recommended reading and viewing.


Nilly - Dec 09, 2003 7:36:16 am PST #156 of 10002
Swouncing

I was obsessed with Alexander's Westmark trilogy when I was in the 6th grade

The only book other than the Prydain books which was translated to Hebrew was "Lukas Kasha" (sp?), and it was lots of fun. I'm glad to know that he has written more, because maybe one day I'll be able to put my hands on them and read them for the very first time. I absolutely love the Prydain books, both the excellent translations and the originals (though the names, for me, will always be the translated ones).


deborah grabien - Dec 09, 2003 7:37:19 am PST #157 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Kate, can I add one to Micole's superb list of recs?

My own favourite of the class (and I love Dick and loathe Gibson, so here's another odd tentacle of taste waving out from the central body) is A Canticle for Liebowitz. Especially if he knows the history of the author, which is scary, amazing and powerful.


Glamcookie - Dec 09, 2003 7:38:58 am PST #158 of 10002
I know my own heart and understand my fellow man. But I am made unlike anyone I have ever met. I dare to say I am like no one in the whole world. - Anne Lister

For the 6-year-old boy, the Oz books are great fun. For the 11-year-old girl, The Wolves of Willoughby Chase.


Maysa - Dec 09, 2003 7:39:29 am PST #159 of 10002

I don't remember when I started the Prydain books, but I was obsessed with Alexander's Westmark trilogy when I was in the 6th grade. (Also books about ideas, but also funny and character-driven.) Okay, I haven't read a book of Alexander's that I haven't liked.

I've always meant to read his books, but I never did. Is it really pathetic to go to the children's section of your local library to check out books for yourself?


Nilly - Dec 09, 2003 7:41:27 am PST #160 of 10002
Swouncing

Is it really pathetic to go to the children's section of your local library to check out books for yourself?

No.


Nutty - Dec 09, 2003 7:42:04 am PST #161 of 10002
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

The only book other than the Prydain books which was translated to Hebrew was "Lukas Kasha" (sp?), and it was lots of fun.

In the US this was published as "The First Two Lives of Lukas-Kasha", and it is among Alexander's better novels. The Westmark books -- Westmark, The Kestrel, and The Beggar Queen, are about a pretend country in Europe in about 1820, with revolutions and counter-revolutions and a couple of really fun characters. It's all one big reality-stretch of a universe -- Mickle can't be that good at everything; the coincidences are too much -- but the books are by turns hilarious and exciting and really dark, which is all I could have asked for in the 6th grade.