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 enjoyed Summerland, but it felt very much like a hodgepodge, and it's not nearly as good as K&C. An easy read, if a longer one than necessary.
Nutty's right (as she so often is) about
Doomsday Book.
Oddly enough, it's part of the same universe as
To Say Nothing of the Dog,
which is hysterically funny. I remember nothing particularly funny in DB, and I haven't read it since it first came out. I was too depressed to reread.
Oddly enough, it's part of the same universe as To Say Nothing of the Dog,
Oh, are they? I mean, the similarity in theme, if not tone, was obvious, but I didn't realize they were that connected because I read them so far apart. I really enjoyed both, though they're such different experiences.
Brenda, he told a stomach flu story (which was, in fact quite gross, I was a little shocked...I would die before making such an event public ) but then he made it all better cause he said "All of you women and men who wanted to have sex with me don't anymore, huh?"
I didn't realize they were that connected
Professor Dunworthy is in both stories, and a couple of people from the first (DB) cameo in the second (TSNOTD). So, yes -- same equipment, if for a completely different experiment. So to speak.
The Rule of Four. One of the authors is actually a college classmate of mine, though I didn't know him. I mostly want to read it for nostalgia's sake, since it's apparently set at Princeton.
I picked it up for the nostalgia reason, and because I always love good conspiracy/academic puzzle/etc. stories. It's quite good, much,
much
better than "The DaVinci Code." The writing is excellent, although I wish the editor had told them to cut back a bit on the metaphors.
"Fire Watch", probably the best thing she ever wrote (a novella), which is neither farce nor unpleasantness.
Love
this. Anyone who wants to major in history should read that story. It makes me cry (in a happy way) every single time.
So jealous of GC, but I met Sherman Alexie so I do have a Hot Arty Writer Story. But still jealous.
Ah, I saw him read when I met Lorrie Moore (
my
Hot Arty Writer Story). He was pretty amusing. "That's right, I'm not satisfied until you've been naked with my book." I haven't read anything by him yet, though (besides the story he read).
If you care about short stories, read "The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven" He makes it look so easy, but, um, it's not.(Damn it.)
"The Rule of Four"?
Hmmm, sounds interesting. I really didn't like The DaVinci Code -- so many people thought I'd like it because -- Da Vinci -- but I thought it wimped out at the end and didn't think it was that great in the beginning or middle either.
Reading
The DaVinci Code
was like reading a crossword puzzle, IMO. So far,
The Rule of Four
is doing a much better job of things. The main point of the puzzle isn't the puzzle--it's the impact that the solving is having on the characters' lives. Also, the answer to the puzzle isn't something that's been bandied about in conspiracy-oriented history books and A&E specials for the past several decades.
When I was at the library last night I picked up a round robin mystery called The Sunken Sailor. I haven't started reading it yet but it's set in an English village between WWI & WWII. Authors are Simon Brett, Jan Burke, Margaret Coel, Deborah Crombie, Eileen Dreyer, Carolyn Hart, Edward Marston, Francine Mathews, Sharan Newman, Alexandra Ripley, Walter Satterthwait, Sarah Smith and Carolyn Wheat. I've read books by some, not all of the writers that participated. Anyway, the writers are members of Malice Domestic.