Handsome brooding vampire guy has to swoop in all sensitive mouth and overhanging forehead. How 'bout leaving some scraps for the homely-looking fellows who don't turn evil when they get some?

Doyle ,'Life of the Party'


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 04, 2004 11:51:56 am PDT #4605 of 10002
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

Not to turn this into the default cartoon thread, but, yeah damn I miss Animaniacs. Everyonce in a while I break out into Lake Titicaca. Also I snicker like a twelve year old at "He was a famous pianist!"


DavidS - Jul 04, 2004 12:10:51 pm PDT #4606 of 10002
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Not to turn this into the default cartoon thread, but, yeah damn I miss Animaniacs.

First of all, it still plays on Nick in the afternoons - usually 3pmish. So you needn't miss it entirely. Second, when we had Saturday Morning Cartoons at the LA F2F, the Animaniacs theme definitely got the most rousing singalong. Third, I recommend buying the Animaniacs Variety Pack (two CDs) because when JZ and Emmett and I are driving somewhere that makes for some funner driving.

Literary: Nick Hornby writes about Dickens in the current issue of The Believer. Sometimes I feel guilty about The Believer - something about the oh-so-tasteful-yet-clever McSweeny-ness of it makes it feel more like a lifestyle fetish object than a journal. But then they go and have really interesting things in it. Like the interview with the sculptor Kiki Smith in this issue, or the philosopher Silvia Benso (her views on ethics would be interesting to a number of Buffistas - Jen, I'm looking at you. No she's not all vegan. It's about ethics' responsibility to otherness).

Hornby also makes good use of Google for literary investigation (searching on "Coetzee" and "spare").


Daisy Jane - Jul 04, 2004 12:26:42 pm PDT #4607 of 10002
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

I have most of the Animaniacs songs on mp3. I'm listening to Lake Titicaca now!!!

I have nothing to add except that I read The Lottery again this morning and got thoroughly freaked out.


Connie Neil - Jul 04, 2004 12:38:41 pm PDT #4608 of 10002
brillig

"It's not fair! It's not right!"

One of the questions in my lit book for this story was to show why one of those statements was false and one was true. (The answer obviously being that it was scrupulously fair.)


Trudy Booth - Jul 04, 2004 12:44:52 pm PDT #4609 of 10002
Greece's financial crisis threatens to take down all of Western civilization - a civilization they themselves founded. A rather tragic irony - which is something they also invented. - Jon Stewart

"It's not fair! It's not right!"

There was no parking anywhere...
And I'm not wearing underwear...


erikaj - Jul 04, 2004 12:56:20 pm PDT #4610 of 10002
Always Anti-fascist!

"Why can't you let it go?" What? I'm a completist.


UTTAD - Jul 04, 2004 1:33:44 pm PDT #4611 of 10002
Strawberry disappointment.

Don't know if this has been mentioned, but "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" is fantastic. It's apparently aimed at kiddies but it's well worth a read. It's a weird sort of murder mystery thingy, from the POV of a fifteen year old autistic kid.


Nutty - Jul 05, 2004 2:25:40 am PDT #4612 of 10002
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

I finished Ivanhoe. You know, for a novel called Ivanhoe, the character of Ivanhoe had a bad habit of being misplaced for a hundred pages at a time. It should have been called Rebecca, because she was the funnest character ever. Okay, Rebecca and the crazy gentiles what fight each other to the death for fun.


Jim - Jul 05, 2004 3:45:18 am PDT #4613 of 10002
Ficht nicht mit Der Raketemensch!

UTTAD - Many people (including the chair of judges) thought Curious Incident... should have won the booker last year. I wouldn't go that far, but it's a cracking novel.


Jim - Jul 05, 2004 5:26:11 am PDT #4614 of 10002
Ficht nicht mit Der Raketemensch!

People, upthread, were talking about O'Brien:

I like most of them but I keep stumbling in parts. Right now Master and Commander is giving me fits because I like the characters and I think I like the story but there's so much about the ships and the time period that I just don't understand that sometimes I feel like I'm flailing.

I've read all of them more times than I'm willing to admit,and I still don't know what 80% of the nautical terms mean. And I was given my first boat at 9, grew up like Raleigh chatting to the retired sailors by the harbour, and used to race dinghys as a kid against 3 olympic yachtsmen. Doesn't matter.

I actually haven't read a Sharpe's book in a while but I remember them being more...well, less...I'm not sure how to describe it but in some ways it seemed easier to read because maybe the narrative style felt a bit more modern. But I'm not sure that means what I think it does.

Without wanting to get into the whole canon thing, you know the phrase "transcending genre" everyone was tossing around? That's the difference between Cornwell and O'Brien. Cornwell is a commercial genre writer, nothing more. His prose exists to tell a story, his characters are functional, and if he gets X number of thrills into the book he's done his job. O'Brien isn't even the same species. Within the structure of the genre he's writing about history, our view of history, the nature of small communities, friendship, Irishness and Englishness, the Enlightenment and a thousand other things. That's literature. It's less easy to read cos it's doing more stuff.

It was giving me fits trying to figure out what kind of man Jack Aubrey is but his beginning friendship with Maturin is what's kept me going.

Aubrey is an English Tory, Maturin an Irish Radical. That's the central point of the two characters.

And was it erika who was reading Infinite Jest? If you don't like the footnotes, give up on it. They're the fun of the book.