All right, no one's killing folk today, on account of our very tight schedule.

Mal ,'Trash'


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."


Atropa - Jan 29, 2004 11:23:04 am PST #680 of 10002
The artist formerly associated with cupcakes.

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.

WHAAAAAA?!

No, I can't make any sense of that.

I haven't read anything by Tepper, and now I don't think I want to.


Betsy HP - Jan 29, 2004 11:25:49 am PST #681 of 10002
If I only had a brain...

But you do. You want to read the Marianne novels. You want to read Grass.

I want to go to a meeting now. Really I do.


Volans - Jan 29, 2004 3:50:20 pm PST #682 of 10002
move out and draw fire

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.

I didn't get this from Beauty. I actually was kind of amused by bits and pieces of that book (like Snow White being such a git), but not my favorite Tepper. Oddly, my husband likes that one but can't explain why. I think I've read maybe 8 or 9 of her books, and went from loving the language and ideas in Grass to ducking reflexively as I read, in an attempt to avoid the falling anvils.

I did like much of The Family Tree ...I think that's the one where the chef keeps looking up and saying "Grummel grummel." Won't give more than that away, but "grummelling" has been added to my vocab.


Jess M. - Jan 30, 2004 9:00:06 am PST #683 of 10002
Let me just say that popularity with people on public transportation does not equal literary respect. --Jesse

Has anyone read Lost by Gregory Maguire? I finished it last night. I thought it was a really interesting idea/concept, extrememly poorly executed. Curious what anyone else thinks.


justkim - Jan 30, 2004 9:33:31 am PST #684 of 10002
Another social casualty...

I read it a couple of years ago, Jess, and I thought pretty much the same things. I really liked the idea, but I didn't get much of the Scrooge connection that was supposed to be there. And while I felt bad for main character (Winnie?), I mostly wanted her to just get a grip. I wish I remembered more details at the moment, but I only just remember feeling sad about the situation and annoyed by the characters' way of dealing with it.


Jess M. - Jan 30, 2004 9:39:43 am PST #685 of 10002
Let me just say that popularity with people on public transportation does not equal literary respect. --Jesse

Yeah, the literary backstory that is Maguire's thing (that's my technical word for it) was tenuous.


Typo Boy - Feb 01, 2004 6:07:34 pm PST #686 of 10002
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

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.

I meant only the fourth book. Mordred was a total retcon. I loved the entire trilogy (even the third one), and always pretend the forth book never happened.

In terms of Tepper; yeah Tepper really does seem to hold views that other feminists are often caricatured as having. Even Andrea Dworkin holds more nuanced views than she is given credit for. Or put it this way; Tepper's particular version of feminism makes Dworkin seem nuanced by comparison.

I also notice that Tepper actually uses her feminism to be quite reactionary on other issues. She seems to hate poor people passionately. Every now and then she will portray a male who is more or less decent, always aristocratic or at least very upper middle class. I don't remember her ever portraying a working man, let alone a poor man who came across as OK.

Even poor women are usually not portrayed very favorably; and when they are, you know that one way or another they are going to end up in an aristocracy. Note that Marianne was only temperorarily poor, having been cheated of a rich inheritance.

I also remember in Beauty, a passing comment to the effect that at least the old knights, chauvinist as they were, were chivaloraus and gallant to women. The comparison was being made to modern high school males.

It seems to me that writing on such a subject, she might have taken about five minutes to do enough research to determine that even at the height of the fashion for chivalary (not a very long portion of the history of knighthood) chivalary was reserved for upper class women. Lower class women were pretty much fair game for very riough seduction and rape. I seem to remember learning this in passing in college from my Freshman Western Civilization textbook.

I loved the Marianne trilogy, and most of the True Game series; so I was really annoyed started tossing anvils.


deborah grabien - Feb 01, 2004 6:16:36 pm PST #687 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

TB, I am in complete agreement with you, both on the fourth book of the Merlin series and on Tepper's views - hence are snarling smackdown back at the Nebulas when the earth was still cooling.


Typo Boy - Feb 01, 2004 6:33:58 pm PST #688 of 10002
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

I would have like to have seen that - or at least read a transcript.


deborah grabien - Feb 01, 2004 6:48:33 pm PST #689 of 10002
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

All I remember was saying I thought "The Gate to Womens Country" had some interesting ideas, or that it was a very interesting take on a concept, or something - made it clear I'd found it an interesting read which, lord knows, I wouldn't have said as an insult. She looked me up and down and made some crack about not really worrying about crit from one of those so-called feminists who wears makeup and high heels. I responded with the comment that any woman who didn't think making her own body happy in whatever way nourished it was a valid expression of personal power, much less feminism, needed to go the fuck away and think about it some more. We then snarled off in different directions, and I never read another word she wrote. End of discussion.

Scary thing? I have no memory of her physicality. I not only couldn't tell you what she was wearing, I couldn't tell you what she looked like. I wouldn't have known her on the street the following day, that's how completely I blocked her out.