Wesley: Perhaps the whole point of this experiment is hair. Gunn: I vote he's not in charge.

'The Cautionary Tale of Numero Cinco'


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."


Ginger - Mar 21, 2004 5:58:36 pm PST #1671 of 10002
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

My parents didn't care what I read, probably because they had no idea what the books were, but they had very firm notions about bedtime. Also, I shared a room with my sister.


meara - Mar 21, 2004 6:32:18 pm PST #1672 of 10002

I DID get in constant trouble for reading in a poor position, reading at the table, or reading in dim light

Oh GOD yes. The one time I remember being beaten was when I was discovered (yet again) reading after bedtime by the light from the hall (I insisted I was afraid of the dark so that I could have the door open and the hall light coming in....so I could read...). Claimed it was bad discipline, lying to them ("no, I'm not reading!") and would ruin my eyes (puh-LEAZE--with the genetics my parents gave me, no WAY i wasn't ending up with coke-bottle glasses, reading or no!)


deborah grabien - Mar 21, 2004 7:08:02 pm PST #1673 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

I was allowed to read myself to sleep, so the only issue was someone remembering to come into my room before powering down whichever house we were in, and turning off my lights. I was usually out, with an opened book face down across my chest. Very stereotypical.


Pix - Mar 21, 2004 7:13:38 pm PST #1674 of 10002
We're all getting played with, babe. -Weird Barbie

I was discovered (yet again) reading after bedtime by the light from the hall (I insisted I was afraid of the dark so that I could have the door open and the hall light coming in....so I could read...).

Me too! Sing it sistah!


§ ita § - Mar 21, 2004 7:17:47 pm PST #1675 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Mnnf! You guys just made me realise I have no book to read on the recumbent bike tomorrow. I just couldn't put Fast Women down, although it's supposed to be my not-in-the-house book.


Pix - Mar 21, 2004 7:34:12 pm PST #1676 of 10002
We're all getting played with, babe. -Weird Barbie

I'd offer you one of mine, but it won't fit through the monitor.


Java cat - Mar 21, 2004 7:34:32 pm PST #1677 of 10002
Not javachik

On treadmill? books on tape are handy. Nice to have a long enough cord though so you can put the tape part on the ... the ... flat part of the treadmill where the controls are. whatever that's called.

I could and did read everything in the house. The best thing was that I had a uncle who gave good hardcover books for presents and he had very good, age appropriate taste. No surprise when after retiring as an exec in a big car company that he retired to FLa. and helped out teaching reading in a local elementary school. Great guy. When I think back on what were favorite books, they were almost all books he'd given me.

The local gazillionaire donated enough money to build a real library in my small home town just about at the time that I had read everything in the children's section of the town library that was in a large house in town.

The good thing, now that I look back at it, is that the old library had really old books, so I was reading books that were popular when my parents were kids - like Bobbsey Twins & more - at least I think so. Take me too long to go find card catalog on this computer and find out when it was published. Good in that I think i't's kind of cool.

When I got to advance lit in high school, and we were handed the list of Great Books to go over, I'd already read more of them than anyone else in class (110 of them, or was it 103?) My best friend was only 3 or 4 books behind me.


Pix - Mar 21, 2004 7:59:52 pm PST #1678 of 10002
We're all getting played with, babe. -Weird Barbie

Mentioned this above - wanted to link to it since I have a sneaking suspicion that you would all LOVE this book:Ex Libris: Confessions of a Common Reader by Anne Fadiman (one of the most beautiful and skilled essayists of our time, IMO)

The essays are all about her passion for reading and are hysterically funny. The one on "marrying" your book collection with your SO was my life. So was the one about compulsive proofreading. And so on. You won't regret buying a copy of this book -- every book lover should have it.

Other great recommendations for books about book lovers (again, forgive me if this is a x post from earlier):
Ruined by Reading: A Life in Books by Lynne Sharon Schwartz,
and How Reading Changed My Life by Anna Quindlen


Anne W. - Mar 22, 2004 12:58:11 am PST #1679 of 10002
The lost sheep grow teeth, forsake their lambs, and lie with the lions.

t marks Kristin's post for future reference

The only kind of trouble I ever got into for reading was when I got so sucked into a book that I lost track of time and forgot to do something.

Also the image of a wee Deb asleep with a book splayed open on her chest is just adorable.

One of the things that always gets an awwwwww from me is seeing a very small child, fast asleep, with a large book tented over his or her face.


Nilly - Mar 22, 2004 1:08:56 am PST #1680 of 10002
Swouncing

I fall asleep while reading all the time (not because the book is boring, because I can't keep my eyes open). And I fall asleep on the exact same position in which I was reading, glasses on and light not turned off, so many times people still think I'm awake, for quite a while, when I'm already fast asleep.

I never got in trouble with my parents for reading anything. They monitored pretty carefully what we watched on TV and movie, not so much with books. In fact, they were quite surprised to discover how I constantly read about things that I was never allowed to be exposed to on TV.

The one person who wanted to stop me from reading something was a librarian who wouldn't want to let me take "Jane Eyre", at age 7 or 8. As the little geek that I was am, I brought my mom with me to the library to talk the librarian into letting me read what I wanted. She agreed, but I had to return the book in exactly 2 weeks, no extentions, and she quizzed me about its content after I brought it back. After that, she let me take anything I ever wanted, no comments. Good times.