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 found 1984 so depressing, I couldn't get more than about three pages into it before I had to give up and go read a Garfield collection. Still haven't picked it back up.
Brave New World
is far less depressing, for the most part, and is much funnier. Until the last third or so, and the final image is quite the downer.
Brave New World is far less depressing, for the most part, and is much funnier. Until the last third or so, and the final image is quite the downer.
Oh yeah. Visualizing that last paragraph still gives me the chills.
World building, world painting -- Salman Rushdie does that for me, very well.
I need to read some Rushdie. I have no explanation for why I haven't except that I tend to get lost in bookstores.
Scanner is broken, but I just took a couple of pics. Lemme put them up.
1893 King Solomon's Mines
It may be an earlier edition- there's a dedication on the last page - (something Jones) from his S.S. teacher- 1893
The quote on the front says "May blessings be upon the head of Cadmus, the Phoenician, or whoever it was that invented books."- Thos Carlyle
The books have some great set-piece scenes, too - Green Mars features the fall of a space elevator cable.
Unless they rebuild it, that's in Red Mars. (I went to the Strand today looking for the other two, which I haven't read yet, but they weren't there. For a store with 8 miles of books, their sci-fi section is kind of sad. Lots of William Shatner books, and at least two copies of the LXG novelization, no Kim Stanley Robinson at all.)
I did find Singularity Sky, which I'd forgotten I was looking for, and Clouds End, which I picked up because people had been talking up Sean Stewart in this thread. Also a reprint of the 1903 Good Housekeeping Everyday Cookbook and a book called Cookoff! about competitive cooking.
Oooh, very pretty book, Heather.
Elizabeth Bishop is the motherfucking man (I'm fairly sure Jen will back me up on this)
Hells yes.
Then again, I'd back you up if you were walking backwards into a fire, because I dig you like that.
But I really do like Elizabeth Bishop quite a lot.
Speaking of poetry, I swear the recommendations list is coming up. Fair warning that it will be strongly skewed towards 20th century Americans and Canadians.
Two things:
On AMAZON, you can remove purchased gift books from affecting your recommendations. And I started getting good recommendations after I rated several books I own and marked all recs that I already owned as such.
I made an earlier post that linked to the Great Books Project of the Great Books Foundations and they list several different lists that have been compiled of "canon". I think Alice Walker - The Color Purple is on there, but I am not sure. If you google Great Books Foundation you can find all the info.
And when people say they think something already is canon, are they referring to an actual list like that or somthing more abstract?
Apropos
of stuff that went down a long time ago …
It becomes clear to me why I don't want to analyze literature. It is like knowing details about an actor or actresses' life. It does nothing to improve my appreciation of
Buffy
To know that Alyson and Alex were hooked up in real life. Digging into the thought processes of an author? Same deal.
What is on the page/screen is the real deal.
Taxonomy of literature? More of the same deal. I suspect that people who actually commit literature are entirely unaware of the distinctions, having more to do in their lives related to defeating that blinking cursor standing between them and what they need to say.