Mal: There's plenty orders of mine that she didn't obey. Wash: Name one! Mal: She married you!

'War Stories'


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."


erikaj - Jan 26, 2004 6:42:16 am PST #618 of 10002
Always Anti-fascist!

If you are a crime nonfiction fan, or you read stuff like "Nickel and Dimed", you have to read The Corner right now. I have to admit I started to read it because "Homicide" made me David Simon's bitch, but now I would have to say that this book is more socially significant...and it has that "You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll care" thing too. Not that "Homicide" didn't...but this has more.


msbelle - Jan 26, 2004 9:39:57 am PST #619 of 10002
I remember the crazy days. 500 posts an hour. Nubmer! Natgbsb

I finished Middlesex. Everyone in bookclub seemed to love the backstory stuff except me.

Someone asked about epics in Natter and I would consider this an epic. It covered 3 generations across two countries in lots of details.


Consuela - Jan 26, 2004 11:41:33 am PST #620 of 10002
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

I read SJ Rozan's first Lydia Chin/Bill Smith novel over the weekend. Good read, fun mystery, great family interaction, nice sense of place. Thumbs up. And I gotta love a novel that actually cares about provenance.


Betsy HP - Jan 26, 2004 12:14:09 pm PST #621 of 10002
If I only had a brain...

Where are you right now?


Consuela - Jan 26, 2004 1:37:51 pm PST #622 of 10002
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

Where am I physically? Or in the novel?

Physically, I'm on the 7th floor of an office building in Honolulu, which is so over-air-conditioned I'm wearing a fleece sweater.

In the novel, I finished it.

Now I'm reading Bill Bryson's Made in America, which is great. In fact I was sitting in a coffee shop yesterday reading it, and laughing, and a woman came up to me and said, "I hope you don't mind, but I always make a point to find out what someone's reading when they're laughing out loud." Which was very cool.


Steph L. - Jan 26, 2004 1:37:56 pm PST #623 of 10002
Unusually and exceedingly peculiar and altogether quite impossible to describe

Has anyone read The Lake of Dead Languages, by Carol Goodman?

My best friend foisted it off on me, because she really liked it. It's kind of a ripoff of The Secret History, but it was a nice snowed-in weekend read.


Daisy Jane - Jan 26, 2004 3:43:07 pm PST #624 of 10002
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

If you are a crime nonfiction fan, or you read stuff like "Nickel and Dimed", you have to read The Corner right now.

Tell me more erika. I'm like one of those corner preachers spreading the word when it comes to my love of "Nickel and Dimed."


erikaj - Jan 26, 2004 5:46:29 pm PST #625 of 10002
Always Anti-fascist!

You'd probably love "The Corner" Heather. It's about one family that lives by a drug corner in West Baltimore, and why they make the choices they make and who gets into and out of the drug life(I was completely stunned by who got clean and who didn't...at the beginning it looks very different.) And also it talks about where the drug war went wrong, and how really poor people have different expectations. And a lot of the vivid details I loved about "A Year on The Killing Streets" like what people really do in crack houses. And what a burn bag is(That's when you sell baking soda or something as drugs.VERY hazardous to your health.) My proof that Simon and Burns know whereof they speak: Graffiti in W. Balmer Social Services elevator: "All of y'all that work here can just go fuck yourselves." Trust me...that person is a poet and he doesn't know it.


Daisy Jane - Jan 26, 2004 6:03:16 pm PST #626 of 10002
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

Is it non fiction or fictionalized?


erikaj - Jan 27, 2004 5:05:43 am PST #627 of 10002
Always Anti-fascist!

Non-fiction...some of the dialogue got reconstructed.David Simon used to be a Baltimore Sun crime reporter, and Edward Burns is ex-cop turned schoolteacher(there's a guy loves doing stuff the hard way.) They hung around and followed people, basically.