Can't even shout, Can't even cry. The Gentlemen are coming by. Looking in windows, knocking on doors. They need to take seven, and they might take yours. Can't call to mom, can't say a word. You're gonna die screaming but you won't be heard.

Dream Girl ,'Bring On The Night'


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."


deborah grabien - May 01, 2004 7:23:27 am PDT #2560 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

flea, it just means more Colin for the rest of us. No prob, honestly. And we all have our quirks - I completely missed the John Cusack meeting. His sister Joan, OTOH, knocks my socks off.

"Regency Buck" is one of my favourites - that's the one with Judith and Perry and Lord Worth, yes? You meet those characters again a few years later, in Heyer's wonderful book set in the days up to, during, and right after Waterloo, "An Infamous Army".


beth b - May 01, 2004 7:27:56 am PDT #2561 of 10002
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

this is the point where I admit with a hangdog expression that even though I majored in history, battle scenes make my eyes glaze over


deborah grabien - May 01, 2004 7:36:28 am PDT #2562 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

beth, Infamous Army is less about Waterloo than it is about Brussels and the people (real and fictional) that she's writing about. ALthough she covers the battle, it's not a huge long unbroken battle scene; she does it as much through personalities as through description. It's actually my favourite fictionalised take on Waterloo and the events of that summer; I prefer hers to Thackeray's.

And I know what you mean. Also history major, but most battle scenes? Yaaaaaaawn. Maybe it's because too many of them take them on as somehow heroic, the Grand Sweeping Pageant Of Military Glory.

And I do not now and never have for one moment drunk the Kool-Aid that produces a belief in the rightness of the Grand Sweeping Pageant Of Military Glory.

Also? Don't give a rat's ass about the linear progression of tactics. I want the setting, and I want to care about the people involved. Heyer did that, in spades.


beth b - May 01, 2004 7:42:38 am PDT #2563 of 10002
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

I read Infamous Army sometime in my high school years. I remember skimming through large chunks. It is one of the few of hers that I never reread. I bet I'd feel differently about it now.


Scrappy - May 01, 2004 7:50:52 am PDT #2564 of 10002
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

I adore Infamous Army. Heyer intertwines the lives of the characters and the battle so naturally and seamlessly that the amoutn of work that went into the piece never shows. The scene where Babs and Judith bond over tea after tending the wounded all day? Brilliant.


deborah grabien - May 01, 2004 8:04:13 am PDT #2565 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

The scene where Babs and Judith bond over tea after tending the wounded all day? Brilliant.

Gods, yes. Perfection.

And during the battle itself, what held and kept me were the POVs of people I'd come to care about. Charles, watching a close friend get hit, calling out to another friend shortly after to see if he knew anything, and finding an even closer friend dying nearby...

Crikey. I love that damned book.


Aims - May 01, 2004 9:45:17 am PDT #2566 of 10002
Shit's all sorts of different now.

Has anyone read Woman Thou Art Loosed ?

The movie is being released and I'd kinda like to read it. The little girl on a show I watch is gonna be in it and I'm curious if it's any good.


Jesse - May 01, 2004 1:00:27 pm PDT #2567 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

So, I finally read Bet Me, and now I'm all awwwww and mushy. Glad to read a nice fun book, after The Mermaids Singing. Also, I had an experience with the current round of library books I've never had -- TWO books I couldn't bring myself to finish. Kind of a bummer.


Dana - May 01, 2004 4:42:48 pm PDT #2568 of 10002
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

You know, whenever the whole "I don't find X attractive" conversations come up, and people always say, "Hey, fine, more for me?" I'm always on the "more for me" side.

Is that bad?


§ ita § - May 01, 2004 4:46:34 pm PDT #2569 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Is that bad?

Mostly it means you're EASY.

I finally read Bet Me, and now I'm all awwwww and mushy

Hee. That's just the buzz I got.