We use the latest in scientific technology and state-of-the-art weaponry and you, if I understand correctly, poke them with a sharp stick.

Dr. Walsh ,'Potential'


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."


bon bon - Apr 26, 2004 5:54:51 pm PDT #2370 of 10002
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

Not a Pike fan, per se, but I've often wanted to re-read the books. All I remember is one weird one with a brother and sister who were too close for comfort and I think someone in a wheelchair throws himself into a void at the end.

I seem to remember reading Incognito Mosquito at the same time, in 6th grade. Was it in some kind of school text?


sumi - Apr 26, 2004 5:58:40 pm PDT #2371 of 10002
Art Crawl!!!

What are you talking about? Was there a mirror planet on the other side of the sun from ours? If so, I think I saw a movie of that when I was a small child.


bon bon - Apr 26, 2004 6:01:34 pm PDT #2372 of 10002
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

Maybe, sumi. Sounds kinda familiar but I can't really say for sure. A movie was made of a Pike book, though? That I didn't know.


Micole - Apr 26, 2004 6:01:38 pm PDT #2373 of 10002
I've been working on a song about the difference between analogy and metaphor.

I liked Book of Ruth a lot, but "Bastard Out of Carolina kind of traumatizing" about covers it.

I've never been able to get through any of Hamilton's other books.

And fourth on Cat's Eye.


Emlah - Apr 26, 2004 6:56:48 pm PDT #2374 of 10002
To every idea a shelf...

Is anyone else a huge Pike fan?

In high school I was big into Chrisopher Pike and all the authors that contributed to the Point Horror series: R.L. Stine and a bunch of others I can't remember off hand. You know, those books that had names like The Waitress, The Boyfriend, The Girlfriend etc.

I remember lots of Christopher Pike, mainly because he was really, really dark where a lot of the others were pretty candyass in terms of horror. I remember a series with anonymous letters. Um, I remember one called Monster that completely freaked me out. One with a witch who could see the future. I don't remember The Cold One, what's it about? And is Remember Me the one where a girl dies at a party and comes back as a ghost? Or is that the series that had something to do with scuba diving and a prom on a boat or something? Argh, stupid half-formed memories. Oh, and I remember one where this chick set her friend up for murder by throwing herself off a cliff.

Mmmm, early genre writing experiences. Good. Times.


Gris - Apr 26, 2004 7:02:24 pm PDT #2375 of 10002
Hey. New board.

"Incognito Mosquito - Private Insective!"

That, unfortunately, is all I remember. The catchy phrase.

For kid-level mystery books, I was always a fan of Cam Jansen (she had a photographic memory that took pictures when she said "click") and, of course, Encyclopedia Brown.


Emlah - Apr 26, 2004 7:06:38 pm PDT #2376 of 10002
To every idea a shelf...

Encyclopedia Brown

Yes, yes, a thousand times YES.


Kate P. - Apr 26, 2004 8:23:19 pm PDT #2377 of 10002
That's the pain / That cuts a straight line down through the heart / We call it love

Dude! I'd forgotten all about Cam Jansen.

I read one Pike at a friend's house and was really, well, horrified. Not much of a one for horror, me, even now.


beth b - Apr 26, 2004 8:26:05 pm PDT #2378 of 10002
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

so today at out new library someone had the unenviable job of putting all the cam jasen in alpabetical order by title. there are some evil jobs at the library, esp when you are setting up in a new space.


Gris - Apr 26, 2004 9:38:34 pm PDT #2379 of 10002
Hey. New board.

I read one Pike at a friend's house and was really, well, horrified. Not much of a one for horror, me, even now.

Bah. Pike. R.L. Stine ALL THE WAY.

He actually wrote some decent young horror. Not the fear street stuff as much, and ESPECIALLY not the goosebumps, but I especially remember The Origins of Fear Street being awesome (and vaguely historical novelish) and the Cheerleaders trilogy.