Hope I didn't lose Non Sequitur.
Love this. Danae may have replaced Bucky from Get Fuzzy as my favorite ill-tempered comic strip character.
'Potential'
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."
Hope I didn't lose Non Sequitur.
Love this. Danae may have replaced Bucky from Get Fuzzy as my favorite ill-tempered comic strip character.
Non Sequiter is great. Don't get the Get Fuzzy love.
How can you not love Satchel?
I'm reading Bill Bryson's The Lost Continent: Notes from Small-Town America, and ... I'm not loving it. It's often entertaining, but he's got a nasty wit that he uses on, well, small-town America. Not everyone in rural America is fat, stupid, ignorant, small-minded, or racist. I dunno. I loved "Made in America" and "A Walk in the Woods", but this one? Not as much.
Hey, does A Walk in the Woods paint a good picture of the Appalachian trail & such? I've been looking for good, interesting guides to the area for a friend who is interested and wasn't sure if this was more about author on the trail trail, or trail itself, if you know what I mean....(emphasis, I guess.)
It's more about the author on the trail--it's not something you'd use as a guidebook.
But there must be many many good guidebooks for that trail.
ATC.org is a fantastic guide site, and it has links to guidebooks under the ATC Store section.
I found A Walk in the Woods irritating as hell, as I have found all of Bryson's books except for In A Sunburnt Country. When he's writing about anywhere except Australia, he seems to go out of his way to be as unpleasant a human being/tourist as possible, and then bitches and moans about how unaccomodating everyone is being.
Oh, yeah, absolutely, though I couldn't point you at any myself.
Thanks! I've been sort of lazily looking. The friend is spending his retirement plotting out a novel and writing bits and pieces. A good part of it takes place along the Trail. He has no intention of actually finishing it, he just likes doing the research and and convoluting the plot. It's a fun puzzle to him ( I vaguely recall it is partly a deliberate exercise to keep his mind working- he was diagnosed with Alzheimers proabably a decade ago.)
See, I found A Walk in the Woods endearingly self-deprecating. He was willing to be charmed, and found himself charmed. There is less charm in Lost Continent, although not none. He loves Savannah and Charleston. (Well, who wouldn't?)