I'm just waiting to see if I pass out. Long story.

Mal ,'Heart Of Gold'


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."


Jessica - Jan 03, 2005 6:02:45 am PST #6765 of 10002
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

oh, and for Xmas I got Italo Calvino's If on a Winter's Night a Traveler, which I've only read the intro and first paragraph of. But what a first paragraph!

Oh, I love that book! Easily my favorite Calvino.


Kate P. - Jan 03, 2005 7:44:59 am PST #6766 of 10002
That's the pain / That cuts a straight line down through the heart / We call it love

I got a SIGNED copy of Dinky Hocker Shoots Smack!, which my mother picked up for me when she met M.E. Kerr at a conference earlier this year. It is so very cool. I also got Doris Lessing's two-volume autobiography--way cool, lots of stuff about growing up on a farm in Southern Rhodesia--and The Neverending Story, which I am in the middle of, AIFG. Also, my housemate bought me the huge compilation book of all the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy stories, which I'm rereading and loving all over again.


DavidS - Jan 03, 2005 7:48:58 am PST #6767 of 10002
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

I bought JZ Sorcery and Cecelia based on recommendations here from Jilli and Betsy (I think).

SF Chron reviewed a novel of interest for the board: The Letters of Mina Harker.

Raquel, I found The Rattle Bag on Amazon UK.


Connie Neil - Jan 03, 2005 8:04:06 am PST #6768 of 10002
brillig

I bought JZ Sorcery and Cecelia based on recommendations here from Jilli and Betsy (I think).

Amy got me that for Christmas, along with the sequel! She only got it to me yesterday, and I've already finished it.


erikaj - Jan 03, 2005 8:13:37 am PST #6769 of 10002
Always Anti-fascist!

I got about five Pelecanos books(I'm a very devoted fangirl and always happy to like books by, you know, live people.)

Raymond Chandler's The Big Sleep(not started yet)
Richard Price's Samaritan(pretty great, but not like "Clockers")

Tom Robbins Fierce Invalids from Hot Climates(LOVE this man. The sixties were very nice to him, though.)

And a signed The Wire: Truth Be Told My love affair with both the written word and the dark side(Robbins excepted) carries on.


DavidS - Jan 03, 2005 8:45:41 am PST #6770 of 10002
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

More poetry...

from The Poetry Book Society (UK) (and hence showing a British slant)

***********

To mark the Poetry Book Society’s 50th birthday we conducted a national survey to discover what your favourite poems, poets and collections have been over the last 50 years. Here are the results.

Favourite Books from the Last 50 Years

1 The Whitsun Weddings Philip Larkin
2 Staying Alive Neil Astley
3 Ariel Sylvia Plath
4 The World's Wife Carol Ann Duffy
5 The Rattlebag Seamus Heaney & Ted Hughes (eds.)
6 Birthday Letters Ted Hughes
=7 Making Cocoa for Kingsley Amis Wendy Cope
=7 Mercian Hymns
This particular volume is currently out of print. Hill’s Collected Poems are, however, available. Geoffrey Hill
=9 Death of a Naturalist Seamus Heaney
=9 Elegies Douglas Dunn
=9 Geography III
This particular volume is currently out of print. Bishop’s Complete Poems are, however, available. Elizabeth Bishop

Favourite Poems from the Last 50 Years

1 The Whitsun Weddings Philip Larkin
2 Prayer (from Meantime) Carol Ann Duffy
3 Not Waving But Drowning (from Selected Poems) Stevie Smith
4 Digging (from Death of a Naturalist) Seamus Heaney
=5 A Disused Shed in County Wexford (from Selected Poems) Derek Mahon
=5 Warning Jenny Joseph
7 Aubade (from Collected Poems) Philip Larkin
=8 Daddy (from Ariel) Sylvia Plath
=8 Valentine Carol Ann Duffy
=8 Wild Geese (from Dream Work; US Import) Mary Oliver


Megan E. - Jan 03, 2005 10:03:31 am PST #6771 of 10002

I bought JZ Sorcery and Cecelia based on recommendations here from Jilli and Betsy (I think).

I love Sorcery and Cecelia - good present! I bought myself the sequel, The Grand Tour, on Saturday but I'll have to reread S&C first!


WildDemon Cornelius - Jan 03, 2005 10:19:51 am PST #6772 of 10002
Take your fingers off it, don't you dare touch it, you know it don't belong to you, to you...

Yeah, the Gary Geddes 20th Century Poetry and Poetics is a great anthology for modern and Canadian poets, I still have a well-read copy from first-year college English. It is just English-language poets, no translations of foreign-language poets.

If you want the very best in American poetry from the late Nineteenth Century and Twentieth Century I would recommend Joel Connaroe's Six American Poets and the follow-up Eight American Poets. The first one covers Whitman, Dickinson, Williams, Stevens, Frost, and Langston Hughes. I forget who the next one covers but I believe that Robert Lowell, Elizabeth Bishop, and Sylvia Plath are in there.

Finally, The Rag and Bone Shop of the Heart: Poems for Men edited by Robert Bly, Michael Meade and James Hillman has some really good (and very eclectic) stuff, including non-English language poets in translation such as Neruda, Rumi, Lorca, and Cesar Vallejo, with poems divided into sections based upon theme. Don't let the title fool you, anyone who loves poetry-and thinking about poetry-will love it.


Megan E. - Jan 04, 2005 4:57:58 am PST #6773 of 10002

Just bought The Plot Against America by Philip Roth (40% off). anyone read it?


Volans - Jan 04, 2005 5:02:01 am PST #6774 of 10002
move out and draw fire

Ooo, thanks guys. I'm bookmarking posts like mad. Basically I realized that I've got three poetry books - one's the Norton, one is an "Intro to Poetry" textbook I used for teaching, and one is a "how to analyze poetry" from 1963, which still has some good points, but doesn't contain a lot of actual poetry.

I've then got some specific collections, like Byron and Cisneros and Angelou, but I'm looking for a couple reference books, when I want to find a certain poem or just look for one. So these are all great recs!