I know, world in peril and we have to work together. This is my last office romance, I'll tell you that.

Buffy ,'End of Days'


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."


Consuela - Jul 07, 2004 6:16:08 pm PDT #4742 of 10002
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

Has anyone here read any BALzac?

Balzac wrote dozens of novels. I've read Zola, which was good. Lots of family and social conflict. Poor father whose daughters married well think he embarrasses them, so when he comes to visit they hide him away and make him come in through the back door, that sort of thing.


Hil R. - Jul 07, 2004 7:27:22 pm PDT #4743 of 10002
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

The Great Brain books screwed me up, because they were the first place I saw the word "gentiles," so I thought non-Mormon was the general meaning. Oops.

That element of those books totally confused me. Even though my best friend was Mormon, I'd never heard it used in that sense before.

My favorite Roald Dahl was Matilda. This probably surprises exactly nobody. As for Judy Blume's kids books, I loved both Sally J. Friedman and Sheila.

I was actually just talking with a friend today about about A Little Princess. She loves the movie (the new one, not the Shirley Temple one) but hadn't known it had been a book. I liked Secret Garden better than Little Princess -- more magical elements, and the creepiness of the moors was just cool, and I could relate a lot more to Mary than to Sara. Sara always seemed just a little bit too goody-goody to me.


§ ita § - Jul 07, 2004 7:29:46 pm PDT #4744 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I used to repeatedly borrow the LP of Secret Garden from the Swiss Cottage library.

I have no idea why I preferred hearing over reading that book more than any other.


Connie Neil - Jul 07, 2004 7:35:49 pm PDT #4745 of 10002
brillig

That element of those books totally confused me. Even though my best friend was Mormon, I'd never heard it used in that sense before.

The church, I think, has been trying to downplay the use of the word "gentile" for non-LDS. It's still the term used in many standard church works, but you get a lot of "Oh, no, that's just an old usage, sorry for the confusion" these days when you bring it up.

When were The Great Brain books written?


Hil R. - Jul 07, 2004 7:41:44 pm PDT #4746 of 10002
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

When were The Great Brain books written?

Sometime in the fifties or sixties, I think, but they take place much earlier, maybe 1910 or so.


Connie Neil - Jul 07, 2004 7:48:53 pm PDT #4747 of 10002
brillig

I'll have to check into those, find out who wrote them, if they're from Utah and such. It seems an unlikely milieu to appeal to the wider world at that time.


Hil R. - Jul 07, 2004 7:53:55 pm PDT #4748 of 10002
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

The guy who wrote them was from Utah. IIRC, the books are semi-autobiographical. (I just looked it up. They're by John D. Fitzgerald, who was born in 1907, and I think the first book takes place when he's about 8.)


Polter-Cow - Jul 07, 2004 7:54:45 pm PDT #4749 of 10002
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

Balzac wrote dozens of novels. I've read Zola, which was good.

That's what I was thinking of!

Or maybe I was thinking of the Emile Zola, who had something to do with Rousseau...


P.M. Marc - Jul 07, 2004 10:51:34 pm PDT #4750 of 10002
So come, my friends, be not afraid/We are so lightly here/It is in love that we are made; In love we disappear

Contradicting that, one of the most famous steampunk work is The Difference Engine by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling, cyberpunk's most famous writer and most dedicated propagandist respectively, which is set in a 19th-century Britain undergoing an accelerated Industrial Revolution because Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace were able to come up with workable computers and computer languages. It's got many historical personages and characters from period novels wandering through.

Is it worth me digging through? I own it, on the rec of a peep I knew with a math PhD.

I've (twice) made it through the first two or three chapters before work tasks have eaten my head.


Jim - Jul 08, 2004 12:42:04 am PDT #4751 of 10002
Ficht nicht mit Der Raketemensch!

Is it worth me digging through?

Yes, it's wonderful, although if Steampunk is your bag start with the motherlode - Moorcock's Bastable and (kinda) Jherek Carnelian books.

Danny, Champion of the World is my favourite Dahl, and I must buy it for my nephew. I love The Magic Finger, too.