And you know what? I STILL read them. I read James Bond. In my adolescence, I read Fu Manchu. I can overlook a lot. Shame on me.
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."
I read all the James Bond novels as a teen, same way I read all the Agatha Christie mysteries. I recall them being dated, but don't remember much else, except bogglement at how different they were from the movies.
Jesse, isn't "Live and Let Die" the one that obsesses about the "Chigroes", who are Chinese/Negro mulattoes? Ew.
Ew. As far as I got, it was all about Observing The Negro In His Native Environment. (I.e, Harlem) Lots of "dialect," and "Negresses" and whatnot.
Dr. No is probably the one Betsy's thinking of. Anyway, I'm pretty sure I never read Live and Let Die, and I remember the whole strange thing about the Chigroes. Then again, I also remember the extremely casual comment in one of those books about how emasculated American men are because they let their wives drive them places (presumably, to work).
You're not a REAL MAN until you've left your wife at home to walk to the grocery store.
Real women get groceries delivered
You're not a REAL MAN until you've left your wife at home to walk to the grocery store.
And presumably asked for condoms, beer and suppositories, followed by a Tim Allen-like belch...
I just got an Amazon.ca order, which is making me very happy. It includes an A.S. Byatt collection I did not realize was actually coming out in the U.S. this month, until I saw it in a bookstore yesterday. I have mixed feelings about this mistake. Because, you know, money. Also, the American edition is prettier. But it's not black. I feel this is problematic for a book called The Little Black Book of Stories.
I read The Handmaid's Tale a while ago. Am I mis-remembering that everything she put in the book had already happened somewhere in the world, just not all together?
Well of Lost Plots, the third book in the Fforde series, was my favorite by far.
Love the title. For me, the surprise of the premise of Lost in a Good Book makes it my favorite though WoLP is a lot of fun. The middle one was very disappointing.
I read The Many Lives and Secret Sorrows of Josephine B (historical fiction by sandra Gulliand) on the recent (and final) college tour. It is very popular with book groups in our town and I really enjoyed it. Best part: there are two more which I hope will be as entertaining.
BTW, anyone know anything about the University of Tulsa? It seems to be the front runner for my daughter.
BTW, anyone know anything about the University of Tulsa? It seems to be the front runner for my daughter.
*blinks*
*looks up again*
Oh, Susan *C*, not Susan *W*. Okay. 'Cause otherwise, man, talk about trying to set a child's college plans early...
(And, er, no, I don't know anything about the University of Tulsa, I'm afraid.)