My heart expands / 'tis grown a bulge in't / inspired by / your beauty effulgent.

William ,'Conversations with Dead People'


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."


Nutty - May 05, 2004 10:12:57 am PDT #2700 of 10002
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

Nutty, have you seen the film recently?

Not in probably 3 years, but one does not forget That Voice and That Accent saying "I am in my prime." I don't think I entirely appreciated what a role that is when I saw the movie for the first time.

The really confusing part is that the movie and the book have different plots, in some ways, but at least on the surface have the same point. But I'm not sure that the point stays the same once you get below the surface. I never felt particularly sorry for movie-Brodie, but I pitied her terribly in the book.


Strix - May 05, 2004 10:35:34 am PDT #2701 of 10002
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

It's "Pages from a Young Girl's Journal." I think the easiest place to find it (still in print, also likely to be in libraries) is Alan Ryan's Penguin Book of Vampire Stories. Oh! Which also has the Fritz Leiber, one of the novellas that makes up The Vampire Tapestry, and C.L. Moore's "Shambleau," which I love with a mad passion. And really lovely romantic vampire story called "Bite Me Not; or Fleur-de-Feu" by Tanith Lee.

I have that! I love, love, love it! I've had it for years, and I regularly re-read it.

Jilli, if you don't have it, you must own it. It's a great anthology. It's got Wellman's "School for the Unspeakable" and excerpts from "Varney the Vampire" and Byron's vampire novella.

I read "Sunshine" and it was...fine. Nothing amazng, to me, but certainly good enough for an afternoon's reading. It's not up to par with "Hero and the Crown" or "The Blue Sword."

Edited for idiot-speak


meara - May 05, 2004 2:32:34 pm PDT #2702 of 10002

Bonifant up on Georgia Avenue is much better (I think that's where it is)

Ooh, I'll have to look that one up...

The one I've been going to is up in Gaithersburg, but it's quite fabulous--it's a total semi-underground warren of bookshelves, and the first few times you go, you keep discovering new rooms you didn't know were there. Cramped, but packed. It's near the Nordstrom Rack, too. Shady Grove Road. I used to work right near it, but now it's a hassle to get to. There's a Second Story books about a block from work, but I'm very not impressed by their selection of mystery/scifi, even though they're HUGE.


Katerina Bee - May 05, 2004 2:57:24 pm PDT #2703 of 10002
Herding cats for fun

I just remembered another vampire book: "Children of the Night" by Dan Simmons. There's a lot of present-day stuff about hematology science and AIDS, but everything he wrote about the country of Romania under Ceaucescu was more horrifying than the monster, and that is saying something.


Sheryl - May 05, 2004 3:51:00 pm PDT #2704 of 10002
Fandom means never having to say "But where would I wear that?"

meara,

The Book Alcove? I live real close to that store, and it is way cool. (Reminder to self: next available Saturday, see what books you can sell there from the chair o' culled books)


hun_e - May 05, 2004 6:02:19 pm PDT #2705 of 10002
Meanwhile, back at the Hall of Justice...

Yay! I've just been to my happy place... the library. Ahhh, twelve bucks a year for all the books you can read, seriously doesn't get any better than this. Items I picked up: Lord of the Isles by David Drake as per someone's suggestion on this thread; Shopaholic Ties the Knot by Sophie Kinsella- Bridget Jones with money issues; Trickster's Choice by Tamora Pierce- a fan since jr. high; Sunshine by Robin McKinley- has gotten less-than-rave reviews by readers here; and The Bone Woman by Clea Koff- non-fic tale of a forensic anthropologist who works with the UN in Rwanda, Bosnia, Croatia and Kosovo (a real cheerful tale).

Hmmm... think I might be addicted to my library. I guess the post-school non-textbook freedom has gotten to my head. Oh well, off to watch Corner Gas.


Scrappy - May 05, 2004 6:17:04 pm PDT #2706 of 10002
Life moves pretty fast. You don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

Meara, you can always drive out to Reston and go to Reston's Used Bookstore--founded by MY WAY COOL MOM and her best friend 25 years ago. They sold the store to two long-time employees a couple of years ago, but it's still a really good bookstore.


Deena - May 06, 2004 4:49:04 am PDT #2707 of 10002
How are you me? You need to stop that. Only I can be me. ~Kara

Hey all, popping in before the baby abuse starts to provide a warning. Stephanie Laurens got a hardback deal. She wrote historical romance paperbacks about the Cynster family and they weren't bad. I don't remember them clearly, which probably means beach readability, fun, light, not too many glaring historical errors. Unfortunately, the hardback, her first, reads like the Nikita fanfic Dana's been sharing in the fanfic thread.

If the author has one thing consistently the same, it's that she tells rather than shows. Her descriptions of the heroic couple's sexual encounters are marvels of vocabulary abuse. I found myself shrieking, "blah blah blah!" at it. The bad guy was obvious by halfway through, despite the fact that our heroes never even considered the person. Really, really bad book. Scarily bad. I read the whole thing because I'm an idiot and couldn't imagine how an author I'd previously enjoyed could change so drastically, kept thinking there'd be some last minute salvation. Unfortunately, even the happy ever after ending was boring.

I'm tempted to post this review on Amazon. It's that bad.


sumi - May 06, 2004 4:59:40 am PDT #2708 of 10002
Art Crawl!!!

Wow. That's bad and I wonder what happened?

Also, Cinescape has rumors of HP6 in September.


Betsy HP - May 06, 2004 6:33:43 am PDT #2709 of 10002
If I only had a brain...

Not very likely. Rowlings had a new-ish baby for the beginning of this one, she has ALWAYS run frantically late, and the publishing publicity engine hasn't geared up. By this point in the last book, the title had been leaked, tantalizing snippets were being dropped, and the book was available for preorder on Amazon.