Riley: Maybe I should just let you rest. Buffy: You sure? I bet if you just lay down with me- Riley: Nothing you are about to say will lead to rest.

'Lessons'


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."


erikaj - Jun 16, 2004 7:15:41 am PDT #3291 of 10002
Always Anti-fascist!

I have, but not for real, with like, understanding and shit. I picked it up on "Banned Books Week" one time and just got stoned on the sounds. Cause if it was banned, it's got to be good(I'm such a lefty cliche)


Fred Pete - Jun 16, 2004 7:16:34 am PDT #3292 of 10002
Ann, that's a ferret.

Has any Buffista read it?

I tried. Didn't make it to page 150.


deborah grabien - Jun 16, 2004 7:19:51 am PDT #3293 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Has any Buffista read it? I've never met anyone who has.

You missed my post, I guess. Yes, I've read it, many times. Appreciate it? Maybe not in the accepted "oooh, he's school of yada fishcakes" sense, because I don't actually care what he's considered to be part of; truth to tell; I just know he makes me dizzy in the best possible way, and I want to get naked and roll around in the language. Of course, I had that same reaction to the Illuminati trilogy, except I had no trouble following the flashbacks and whatnot - made perfect sense to me. Which is odd, seeing as how I didn't actually do a lot of acid back in the sixties.

And why are we comparing Woolf and Joyce? Different cases of beer, at least in my head.


Dana - Jun 16, 2004 7:21:10 am PDT #3294 of 10002
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

I've read it.

It helps when you have a guide. "Wait, I thought his parents were dead. Why are people turning into pigs? Oh, it's a hallucination."


Connie Neil - Jun 16, 2004 7:21:36 am PDT #3295 of 10002
brillig

Of course, I had that same reaction to the Illuminati trilogy, except I had no trouble following the flashbacks and whatnot - made perfect sense to me. Which is odd, seeing as how I didn't actually do a lot of acid back in the sixties.

Oh, it made sense to me, too, but I realized I was reading with a lot more focus than I normally did, which was a pleasant change.

Illuminatus! is a great alternative to acid--all the sensory goulash without the nasty physical side effects.


Hayden - Jun 16, 2004 7:22:07 am PDT #3296 of 10002
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

Has any Buffista read it? I've never met anyone who has.

Yeah, right here. I have to say that I'm surprised by the apparent pride some of y'all are exhibiting in admitting that you skipped one of the most important works of literature in the English language. I mean, I understand not reading it; it's definitely not for everybody. Sure, it's tedious in parts, and the structure is deliberately confusing. But, y'know, it's a profound and extremely well-written statement about the concept of heroism in general, one of the earliest attempts to treat genre as a tool to exploit for additional meaning, and a hell of a funny and entertaining story, too.


juliana - Jun 16, 2004 7:23:03 am PDT #3297 of 10002
I’d be lying if I didn’t say that I miss them all tonight…

Illuminatus! is a great alternative to acid--all the sensory goulash without the nasty physical side effects.

Ohhhhhh, yes. Must re-read. Soon. Pref. not on plane to Alaska, for must greet grandparents at end of flight. But soon.


Maysa - Jun 16, 2004 7:23:18 am PDT #3298 of 10002

I'm really, really impressed with all the Buffistas who've read Ulysses. I find even Joyce's linear stuff to be over my head.


Jen - Jun 16, 2004 7:25:07 am PDT #3299 of 10002
love's a dream you enter though I shake and shake and shake you

The gauntlet is down! Woolf may have pioneered the language, but with Ulysses, Joyce perfected the form.

You're certainly entitled to your wrongheaded crazytalkopinion, hayden! But I think _The Waves_ holds up under scrutiny as a better crafted novel than anything Joyce wrote. _To The Lighthouse_ does, too, now that I think of it.

And why are we comparing Woolf and Joyce? Different cases of beer, at least in my head.

Because people often refer to Joyce as the Head Modernist In Charge, and I dispute that. I appreciate his talent, certainly, but I think Woolf gave more to the genre, and to literature in general.

I want a Voyage Out Day or something, damnit.


erikaj - Jun 16, 2004 7:25:46 am PDT #3300 of 10002
Always Anti-fascist!

Maybe I should read it some day like a big girl instead of giggling "Words! Foamy!" But I'm busy with Infinite Jest at the moment.