t not really here
told her I had no idea that it had been made into a movie, and she said oh yes, it had, with Lauren Bacall.
t MSCL likes carrots And Devon Gummersall!
t now really not really here
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."
t not really here
told her I had no idea that it had been made into a movie, and she said oh yes, it had, with Lauren Bacall.
t MSCL likes carrots And Devon Gummersall!
t now really not really here
That was Angela's first best friend, Sharon?
That was Angela's first best friend, Sharon?
Dude, it's Krakow.
OK, the girl Devon's the other one.
OK, the girl Devon's the other one.
Now I'm doubting myself. You're talking about Rayanne, yes?
No! Sharon.
Few. My laziness lost and I looked it up on IMDB.
Devon Gummersall is Krakow.
Devon Odessa is Sharon.
In my continuing obsession with The King in Yellow, I found out that some literary scholars think Chambers may have based the idea for a scandalous work decried by authorities and the Church on J.K. Huysmans' A Rebours (Against the Grain), which I've just purchased. At any rate, it is definitely the "poisonous yellow book" that Oscar Wilde mentioned in The Picture of Dorian Gray. No rumored supernatural properties, but apparently it was so decadent and shocking in its day that people had to be protected from it. Who knew my fascination with the macabre would lead to voluntarily reading classics of French literature?
Also, I found out that the closest real world analog to The King in Yellow is Seress' haunting 1933 song "Szomoru Vasarnap," which was known as the Hungarian Suicide song and banned after scads of listeners took it to heart and threw themselves into the Danube. (The composer's lady love was among their number, leaving behind the song's title on a suicide note.) The composer himself jumped to his death in 1968, though in his case it seems that it was due less to the song's haunting power and more to his failure to follow it up with a similar success in the subsequent decades.
I'm unable to appreciate the full effect (not being conversant in Hungarian), but I recently bought what's supposedly the most evocative English rendition, Billie Holliday's "Gloomy Sunday."
A Rebours is a key text in Wm. S. Burroughs counter-canon. Super decadent, bay-bee! It's even listed in the Catalog of Cool.
Has anyone read Carl Hiaasen's new book Skinny Dip yet?
How is it? I am trying to decide if it is worth taking a hardback on vacation with me.