Lorne: You know what they say about people who need people. Connor: They're the luckiest people in the world. Lorne: You been sneaking peeks at my Streisand collection again, Kiddo? Connor: Just kinda popped out.

'Time Bomb'


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."


Ouise - Jan 08, 2004 6:24:15 am PST #420 of 10002
Socks are a running theme throughout the series. They are used as symbols of freedom, redemption and love.

Oh no! I couldn't tell you how many books of hers I've read -- or how many times I've read each of those.


Katerina Bee - Jan 08, 2004 6:39:27 am PST #421 of 10002
Herding cats for fun

Crap! Another one bites the dust. It will make the sequel to "Wolves of Willoughby Chase" bittersweet (goes to Amazon, puts book on Wish List)

edited for title: Midwinter Nightingale.


Nilly - Jan 08, 2004 6:48:49 am PST #422 of 10002
Swouncing

or how many times I've read each of those.

Well, if any of them is as good as the couple I have read ("Nightbirds on Nantucket" and "Wolves of Willoghby Chase"), then they definitely deserve it. Ever since the first read (a library book, now lost from the library itself, never found in any second-hand bookstore) I couldn't get my hands on a copy of "Wolves", but I've read "Nightbirds on Nantucket" (from the same library, lost only years later, and, again, never seen in any store afterwards) over and over again (and before any of the others, too).

[Edit: could this sentence get any more confused or have more parentheses?]


sumi - Jan 08, 2004 7:02:57 am PST #423 of 10002
Art Crawl!!!

I think that I still need Blackhearts in Battersea, Midnight is a Place, The Stolen Lake . . . and the new one of course.


Micole - Jan 08, 2004 7:26:50 am PST #424 of 10002
I've been working on a song about the difference between analogy and metaphor.

("Nightbirds on Nantucket" and "Wolves of Willoghby Chase"),

This makes me feel sad, because those two books are in a series, but they're a book apart. I guess the intervening books wasn't translated into Hebrew? I am distressed on behalf of Nilly and other Israeli children.

The series goes:

1 - The Wolves of Willoughby Chase 2 - Black Hearts in Battersea 3 - Nightbirds on Nantucket 4 - The Stolen Lake * 5 - The Cuckoo Tree 6 - Dido and Pa 7 - Is (or Is Underground) 8 - Limbo Lodge (or Cold Shoulder Road) 9 - Dangerous Games

and the forthcoming Midwinter Nightingale.

* Goes there chronologically but actually written after The Cuckoo Tree. The Whispering Mountain is set in the same world.

[Edited because one equals neither three nor four.]


§ ita § - Jan 08, 2004 7:29:08 am PST #425 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I have never read any Aiken, but I sense a book spree coming on.

Over Christmas I read dumb books (Da Vinci Code, a Grisham, an Evelyn Anthony (what a racist phobe she is)). Now I'm reading Mojo: Conjure Stories an anthology edited by Nalo Hopkinson, and so far it's batting a pretty high percentage. Good personal magic African and diasporic stuff. Mostly voodoo, but still good.


sumi - Jan 08, 2004 7:31:52 am PST #426 of 10002
Art Crawl!!!

Where does The Whispering Mountain fit in this? It's definitely related!


Steph L. - Jan 08, 2004 7:34:27 am PST #427 of 10002
Unusually and exceedingly peculiar and altogether quite impossible to describe

Like the senseless crackhead I am, I'm reading Anne Rice's Blood Canticle, because even though the writing is utterly execrable, I need to know what happens to the characters.

And when I say execrable, I mean it. The entire first chapter is Rice herself, using the thinly veiled excuse of Lestat speaking in first person, basically RANTING at her readership for not liking previous books. And I am not even remotely kidding. She needs to SO get over herself.


Nilly - Jan 08, 2004 7:37:08 am PST #428 of 10002
Swouncing

Yes, Micole, you are right - they weren't translated at all, and I've never seen any of her books in English anywhere here.

Thanks for posting that list. I hope I'll get to use it soon, somewhere.


beth b - Jan 08, 2004 8:10:51 am PST #429 of 10002
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

DH read Blood Canticle. I think he was ashamed. At least he only reads her books from the library now.