Wash: Don't fall asleep now. Sleepiness is weakness of character. Ask anyone. You're acting captain. Know what happens you fall asleep now? Zoe: Jayne slits my throat, and takes over. Wash: That's right. Zoe: And we can't stop it.

'Shindig'


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."


megan walker - Jul 21, 2004 7:02:47 am PDT #5247 of 10002
"What kind of magical sunshine and lollipop world do you live in? Because you need to be medicated."-SFist

msbelle, definitely see the movies, at least the first one--it's very fun.

I've finally started on the stack of books you gave me. Loved Faking It.


msbelle - Jul 21, 2004 7:02:53 am PDT #5248 of 10002
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

And as for the list, I totally get that it is mostly beach reading and things that large quantities of people will like, but I think quite a bit of what I read falls into those same categories. I think I just must read older stuff.

I am very conscious of not wanting to be reading what everyone else is. And I get that that makes no sense if it is a good book taht I would enjoy. But nothing depresses me more than seeing someone on the subway with the same book as me.

ETA - of course there are things that depress me more. blah blah hyperbole cakes.

Glad you like it Megan. I would like my Crusie toaster now please.


Connie Neil - Jul 21, 2004 7:03:56 am PDT #5249 of 10002
brillig

Ludlum is great fun if you like spy stuff, but his "Road" books are laugh-out-loud funny. Anyone who remembers the first Bush administration will find "Road to Omaha" a riot.


flea - Jul 21, 2004 7:09:06 am PDT #5250 of 10002
information libertarian

I guess Anna Karenina is a beach read? Gosh, kids today! Is there a movie coming out, or is Tolstoy just super-cool this summer? (Or is it an Oprah book?)

The NYT book review last page this week noted that 175,000 books are published annually in the US. I think. It is to boggle. I am (temporarily) ordering books for the library's "New Books" area, and it's really overwhelming just reading reviews.


Nutty - Jul 21, 2004 7:10:25 am PDT #5251 of 10002
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

I am very conscious of not wanting to be reading what everyone else is.

I'm not quite that self-conscious in my reading choices, but that bestseller list is pretty much a list of "You have a limit of brain cells, so don't bother with these until vacation rolls around, and even then, be selective."

Which I have to be anyway, since I almost never buy new (especially mass-market) books if I can help it.

Megan's right -- you'll probably enjoy the Bourne movies just fine, maybe better, without reading the books. I will say, however, that Ludlum always had an entertaining eye for the skillset of a spy. Book-Bourne is the king of tiny details, psychology, and elaborate plans, the sort of thing that is usually too cumbersome to pull off in movies. Also, his politics are way subtler.


Polter-Cow - Jul 21, 2004 7:10:28 am PDT #5252 of 10002
What else besides ramen can you scoop? YOU CAN SCOOP THIS WORLD FROM DARKNESS!

I guess Anna Karenina is a beach read? Gosh, kids today! Is there a movie coming out, or is Tolstoy just super-cool this summer? (Or is it an Oprah book?)

It's an Oprah book. The first one she endorsed without even reading it.


msbelle - Jul 21, 2004 7:13:31 am PDT #5253 of 10002
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

HA! I knew someone would catch that (AK). I wonder why it is on the list? Oprah doesn't do books anymore and there is no movie.

eta: I guess she does do them still. I thought she had stopped.


Lyra Jane - Jul 21, 2004 7:15:09 am PDT #5254 of 10002
Up with the sun

"The Secret Life of Bees" is supposed to be pretty good. Nicholas Sparks is always bad.

I know very little about any of the other books. Really, i only read the bestsellers list to see if Al Franken is doing better than Ann Coulter (or whatever the lefty/righty authors of the week are) or the reverse.


Connie Neil - Jul 21, 2004 7:16:27 am PDT #5255 of 10002
brillig

Why has Oprah dropped books?


Consuela - Jul 21, 2004 7:18:13 am PDT #5256 of 10002
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

Oddly enough, we picked Anna Karenina for my classics book club this month. It's a little disconcerting to find it on the NYT best-seller list via Oprah.

I have read The Bourne Supremacy, and Nutty's right, they get progressively worse. The first one was kinda fun, but after that basically they just involve lots of running around and shrieking. I recall lots and lots of yelling. And swearing. I did however, think The Matarese Circle was very good, what I remember of it.

Now my spy novel reading basically consists of Alan Furst, who's excellent. Strong prose, complicated conflicted characters, dark and foreboding WWII-era and post-war Europe. Good stuff.

I see Dan Brown is on the list with another one. I keep hearing about another novel by two guys that is also sort of a secret history, but it's much better than The Da Vinci Code. Something of Four? That ring any bells?