Willow: That's a work ethic! Buffy, you're developing a work ethic! Buffy: Do they make an ointment for that?

'Beneath You'


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."


juliana - Jun 18, 2004 11:43:01 am PDT #3533 of 10002
I’d be lying if I didn’t say that I miss them all tonight…

I'm debating hauling either Gravity's Rainbow or Infinite Jest on the plane with me next week. On the one hand - both are very heavy books. On the other - 5.5 hour flight, both ways, direct. I'll need something to occupy my brain.


Connie Neil - Jun 18, 2004 12:06:51 pm PDT #3534 of 10002
brillig

I took a bunch of books with me on a business trip that was supposed to last a month. The trip got extended to two and a half months. Was I panicked at the thought of being away from Hubby that long? Nope, I panicked at the idea of running out of books. I shipped a separate box home, because I'd found books I'd been meaning to buy for my library. I left a grundel load for the boarding house's loaner book shelf.


Ginger - Jun 18, 2004 12:12:00 pm PDT #3535 of 10002
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I usually figure out what books I'm taking on a trip before I think about clothes.


Hayden - Jun 18, 2004 12:12:11 pm PDT #3536 of 10002
aka "The artist formerly known as Corwood Industries."

Gravity's Rainbow is definitely a time-eater, Juliana. I'm a fast reader, and I usually take weeks to read it.


deborah grabien - Jun 18, 2004 12:52:36 pm PDT #3537 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

juliana, Gravity's Rainbow makes Finnegan's Wake look like a lightweight; it eats the brain as much as it eats the time. I don't know if you've read Pynchon before, but if not, be warned: he's very much a love it or hate it proposition. I've never met anyone who was lukewarm about him.

And I just got a birthday prezzie from Kristin T, and it's on now sitting on my incunabulae shelf, where I can not only keep the cats away from it, but where I can drool over it at a safe distance without risking spotting it with my own saliva.


Connie Neil - Jun 18, 2004 1:13:47 pm PDT #3538 of 10002
brillig

So what is the prezzie? Is it incunabula?


hun_e - Jun 18, 2004 1:45:46 pm PDT #3539 of 10002
Meanwhile, back at the Hall of Justice...

after having read many older people books since then.

Hee hee Polter-Cow, you mean books such as Harry Potter (I - V), anything by Tamora Pierce, and the Anne of Green Gables stuff? (Read in the past six months at least). Not that I haven't read any older people books, or anything.

I enjoyed The Weekend because of the mysterious hottie who turned out to be a long-lost twin brother, the mysterious poisoning by a friend, Mexico, the heroine was enjoyable, the whole first true love thing, and the bitchy sister.

Although in general I will agree that Pike's books tend to run together in my memory of them.

I forgot to add Remember Me to the list, as well as The Last Vampire although the sequels to both weren't as enjoyable.


Pix - Jun 18, 2004 4:44:44 pm PDT #3540 of 10002
The status is NOT quo.

And I just got a birthday prezzie from Kristin T, and it's on now sitting on my incunabulae shelf, where I can not only keep the cats away from it, but where I can drool over it at a safe distance without risking spotting it with my own saliva.

I'm so happy you like it! Aimee, it was a special 50th birthday find of an older book that I knew Deb would like. I won't give away what it is, though. If Deb wants to share, she can. If not, that's fine too.


Polter-Cow - Jun 18, 2004 8:11:30 pm PDT #3541 of 10002
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Not that I haven't read any older people books, or anything.

Well, actually, the Harry Potter books have a very accessible style to them, since it's usually an omniscient narrator. With Pike, if he's not writing first-person, he's often writing third-person teen, so a lot of the language feels off.

I forgot to add Remember Me to the list

I got that one for fifty cents and read it recently. It's still pretty cool. Another good one was Die Softly. Need to find that one. They actually had Witch, but it was the icky re-release cover, so it pissed me off.


deborah grabien - Jun 18, 2004 8:54:49 pm PDT #3542 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

I won't give away what it is, though. If Deb wants to share, she can. If not, that's fine too.

Perfect condition original Book Club edition of Hemingway's A Moveable Feast, which is the book of his - along with his passion for cats and his dislike for facism - that makes me forgive all the macho. I love that novel with every inch of my beating heart, because Paris is my other home city (Florence has become the third head of that triad) and very few non-French writers got Paris the way Hemingway did.

And Kristin is angelic.