Those two books do sound good.
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'ma go sit with ita on Tepper, but most of you probably suspected that.
I have mercifully blanked the title from my memory, but I hit midpoint with one of her books and the only thing keeping me from running it through the shredder -- and giving some hope to the bookpaper for a better life in its next incarnation -- was the fact that Connie had lent me the book, and I would have had to spend my own money to replace it.
How weighty are these?
Not very weighty at all; I found them both light and airy pleasurable reads. In fact, I re-read Serpent Garden every so often as a comfort read. I like it when Susanna prevails, and the description of her painting is cool.
I totally missed the Christianity theme in Chronicles of Narnia as a child, having been raised without religion. I was utterly amazed when I figured out how important church was to other people - I'd no clue. This background worked for me in Compass and Knife, because that sort of thing gets by under my radar. Even I couldn't miss it in Amber Spyglass, though.
Edited for bad tagging. Oops. Really, I can preufreed gude.
ita is me on Tepper.
Aw jeez. Mlle. Tepper. Yes indeed.
I met her about 15, 16 years ago, maybe a bit longer - Nebula awards in LA, whenever that was. I liked her first book - forget the title now - and said so. We got into a discussion of feminism and she basically got on my case about how I couldn't be a feminist because what was I doing with all that makeup and those high heels? (Not her words, but her argument.) I said I felt strongly that any woman who doesn't get that dressing up as a celebration of one's own body is pure feminism needed to go home and think about it.
I haven't read any more of her. Did I miss anything? Someone said something about using a hammer, which is how I remember the conversation.
Aside from its major flaws, a total retcon..
TB, the fourth book, you mean? Not the series, I hope. I loved the first two - Hollow Hills and Crystal Cave - with a stone passion.
Sometimes I think Philip Pullman is C.S. Lewis reincarnated. They have many of the same strengths and flaws as writers, just coming from opposite ends of the spectrum on religious opinion. To judge from interviews, Pullman is completely blind to this.
I second the vote for Judith Merkle Riley. Her books are tremendously engaging and not effortful reading at all.
I couldn't be a feminist because what was I doing with all that makeup and those high heels?
Where is Eddie Izzard when you need him?
There were bits of The Gate to Women's Country that I found interesting, but the premise made me angry to the point of irrationality. I can't even read her YA stuff anymore.
There were bits of The Gate to Women's Country that I found interesting, but the premise made me angry to the point of irrationality.
Yes. Hence the snarling little argument in LA.
Right now, I'm reading very little; I generally don't when I'm writing steadily. But I am doing two books: I'm rereading Thornyhold (speaking of Mary Stewart), a book that makes me extremely happy. And I'm reading a book Beth's DH lent me, about the blues and folk revival in the sixties UK: Dazzling Stranger: Bert Jansch and the British Folk and Blues Revival, by Colin Harper. It's wonderful and for me, it's like an artesian well of info and memories combined.
Sherri Tepper's Grass is good. I liked The Gate to Women's Country. Even though I don't buy the premise, the book was explicitly about male-female relationships, so I thought her biases worked fine in it artistically. When it got to the point that it appeared that Tepper was capable of writing a book that argued that electricity would be better if women ran power plants and were electricians, I pretty much gave up on her.
I gave up on her around the sleeping beauty rework that explained that anybody who read horror novels was complicit in child abuse, rape, and all the horrors of the culture.