Early: So is it still her room when it's empty? Does the room, the thing, have purpose? Or do we -- what's the word? Simon: I really can't help you. Early: The plan is to take your sister. Get the reward, which is substantial. 'Imbue.' That's the word.

'Objects In Space'


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."


Daisy Jane - Jul 01, 2004 12:21:16 pm PDT #3938 of 10002
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

Hmm. What about a book club thread? Where we read stuff and talk about it- because if it's that most people are reading Harry Potter because it just came out-that's always going to exclude people like me who wait forever to buy a book.


Nutty - Jul 01, 2004 12:21:22 pm PDT #3939 of 10002
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

I learn more, and more deeply, from a rancorous conversation in which I must to force myself to remain engaged than from a conversation between myself and someone with whom I agree and with whom conversation blooms easily.

I find this is sometimes true of literature. (*) I don't find it often true of conversation, however. David, if your snot-outburst above was an effort to stimulate the conversation, I'm going to be very angry with you.

If it's just you being completely wrong-headed, then we can civilly disagree. Civilly, I say!

* Sometimes, the "fighting" with the book makes me obsess on an irrelevant plot point of the novel, to the detriment of my paying attention to more important developments. Other times, when the dumbass schema of a book is laid out for me like a roadmap in advance, all that energy I would otherwise spend on the plot can be used to critique (nastily) the writer's choices in getting me from Point A to Point B.


Susan W. - Jul 01, 2004 12:23:39 pm PDT #3940 of 10002
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

Aye caramba, Susan. I can damn well set my watch by when you're going to bristle about the Romance genre being dismissed.

And why shouldn't I bristle? Dammit, I'm a highly intelligent person, and for the time being I'm focusing the best storytelling abilities I have on writing romances. Can you blame me for getting pissed off when people say a format I'm working hard to master and trying my best to create well-written, moving works within is inherently inferior, and that anyone who writes it is a hack?

This is a tough sentence to parse. I didn't say Jane Austen was unintellectual - though what discussion I've seen here hasn't gone much beyond strong identification with Elizabeth Bennett.

Well, to me the two things that make Austen such a brilliant writer, worthy of her classic status, are the sheer smooth beauty of her prose and the vividness of her characterization. Part of which involves readers strongly identifying with her protagonists. Are you saying that's an unworthy way to read a book?


erikaj - Jul 01, 2004 12:23:41 pm PDT #3941 of 10002
Always Anti-fascist!

But what about the people that get knocked off the canon? Sometimes it's "political",yeah? Cause there aren't as many female Great Writers as men.(as opposed to great writers, of which I bet it's even) That's about who decides, right?


DavidS - Jul 01, 2004 12:25:35 pm PDT #3942 of 10002
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

David, if your snot-outburst above was an effort to stimulate the conversation, I'm going to be very angry with you.

Which one? The first blurt, or the snipe at Susan?

The first blurt I don't take back. You know what I'm angry about? People that don't want to contribute to the discussion wanted to squash it. That's what it felt like. That's what I resent.

As for the snipe at Susan - that was rude of me and I apologize.


Daisy Jane - Jul 01, 2004 12:28:30 pm PDT #3943 of 10002
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

What if we did have somewhere to discuss those works- or the things we think are great works. I do admit that not everyone having read them or not reading them around the same time was a fair point- though I sympathise with Hec and Hayden, in that I don't read a lot of the stuff in here.


Nutty - Jul 01, 2004 12:30:55 pm PDT #3944 of 10002
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

Two tellings things about this example: (1) "a year or two back" and (2) Angus' presence.

Well, #1, I can't think of a new bestseller book that has been worth my time since then (I don't tend to read bestsellers, and am not a Harry Potter fan), and #2, Angus's joke was the effective end of the conversation. Because we were arguing about subtlety, lack thereof, and its outcomes.

As for the Two Outbursts of The Manservant, I still think #1 is unfair, but I'll allow as how unfairness in the interest of blurting one's frustration is a justifiable offense. But, for the record, I was not seeing the conversation trending towards "Oh poor me, deep thinking is TOO HARD", but rather into one of those vague, woolly, "I liked or disliked X" themes.

And, you know, you can't legislate deep thought. If people aren't up to composing epic argumentations about a work, they're just not. Sometimes I am, but not always; and here, where the thread tends to be slow, is not always the best bang-for-my-buck in epic argumentation terms. Also, I don't know as how anybody else on this thread is reading Ivanhoe right now.


erikaj - Jul 01, 2004 12:31:27 pm PDT #3945 of 10002
Always Anti-fascist!

So, Hec, assuming there is a canon, do you really think it can be made independent of social agenda? Or is it a mistake to even try? Cause some critics get really freaked by attempts to adjust it.


deborah grabien - Jul 01, 2004 12:33:31 pm PDT #3946 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

You know I wouldn't have brought it up except my fucking heart sinks every time people do the tap-dance of "Reading is fun. Thinking about it makes my head hurt."

Eh, I've said my piece. I think that's bullshit; I do think people dislike being lectured about what they ought to enjoy, because someone has designated it as "great".

Listen up, please: I am now fifty years old. I've been reading anything that appealed to me since I was five, and writing - plot, character and structure - since I was fourteen. Trust me, thinking about it doesn't make my head hurt. What makes my head hurt is people telling me that I must love something because otherwise I'm a fool.

So, just repeating, I'm not a fool. And I still don't want you, or anyone else, fucking with the mechanism of what makes me happy by insisting I dissect every single fucking word down to its molecular level, under the guise of intellectualism. If that's what makes you happy, go for it. I'll stand at your back and defend to the death your right to read that way, whether I understand why you'd want to or not.

But I want the same respect I offer. And when I'm accused of stupidity or anti-intellectualism because I do not give a single flipping hell about structure or canon? The line of disrespect has been severely crossed.


Aims - Jul 01, 2004 12:35:31 pm PDT #3947 of 10002
Shit's all sorts of different now.

You know what I'm angry about? People that don't want to contribute to the discussion wanted to squash it. That's what it felt like. That's what I resent.

I was a part of this discussion from the beginning and I didn't take anyone's post as wanting to squash the discussion on crit or great lit or what the hell ever.

Ya know what makes me angry and what I resent? That just because the conversation wasn't going in the way you might have wnted it go, you felt the need to blurt as how some of us were wrong and then take a swipe at Susan. That's how it felt to me.