turns out I haven't been to my local library in a year. A year ago I returned some books late. turns out they were a month late and I had over $20 in fines. I haven't done that since college. SO I paid the fine adn took out three books today. I think I will mark the due date in my calendar in bold.
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 updated my bookcrossing list, geez I was far behind.
Lilty, I registered VH, so when you get it, if you could go to the site and say so, also, feel free to pass on once you are done with it. I will try to get it mailed this week.
Thanks so much, msbelle- I have one more book crossing book that I've got to release, too. This will jog my memory!
Too long without a post in literary...
I heard Michael Chabon speak last night at the DCJCC. He read a memoir story for about an hour, then answered questions and signed books (yay for signed copy of Kavalier and Clay, the BF got the Escapist. His talk was about golems and creation, and being Jewish and family. He was fantastic.
Has anyone read anything by his wife? Her first name is Ayelet...her last name should be easy to look up, if I were less lazy.
Edit: Ayelet Waldman
Deb is friends with his wife, actually.
yeah? Her books look fun, from what I just read on Amazon. I'm adding her to my list of authors to look into.
Chabon's new book, that he's hoping to finish this summer, sounds interesting. He was speaking to a Jewish audience last night, and the new book takes place in the 1940's, post WWII, and supposes that a large group of Jewish refugees settled in Alaska, making their community there. You could sort of hear the audience vaguely interested, and then he said "and the state of Israel was never formed," and there was this audible intake of breath.
So instead of Palestinians, they'd have Inuit, caribou and polar bears; instead of the desert, northern lights. OK, as fiction that sounds... really cool. I want to read Kavalier anyway. Too bad I have about 40 books in the TBR queue right now.
Me, I'm reading one of the books that I got at Powell's...it's called "The Rising of the Moon", and I'm about halfway through it--it was filed as sci-fi, but it's not, really, other than being set in the future. A future that supposes Ireland got overtaken by the Catholic church and got mad oppressive to the women.
It's *dreadful*. And rather ridiculous. But the political speeches are fun.
I'm reading No Bone Unturned, which is a hagiography biography, sort of, of Doug Owsley, a forensic anthropologist at the Smithsonian. It's fairly well-written, in an engaging journalistic style, but the endless fawning over Owsley make me grind my teeth.
It also annoys me when the writer gives an exact transcription of a conversation that happened several years before he started writing the book. How could this possibly be accurate?
The big issue in the book is the legal battle over the disposition of Kennewick Man, who was discovered on federal land in 1995 or so. The writer really does spend a lot of time hammering away at the government and the tribes, and making the scientists look perfectly sensible and wise. I know from experience that neither the legal issues nor the science were quite as simple as he's making them out to be.
Although it was fun to see a woman I used to work with show up in the book.
All that said, interesting book so far. Just not perfect.
Yup, Ayelet Waldman. We're doing a literary festival together in December. Ayelet is also my source for kosher grocery locations, when Nilly is here. She writes the Mommy Track mysteries, which are very good fun; her crossover book is called "Daughter's Keeper" and is very powerful.
Her husband, besides being one of my favourite writers on planet Earth, is also brilliant. And a cutehead. Kavelier and Klay turns me into jello, every single time.