It's called a blaster, Will, a word that tends to discourage experimentation. Now, if it were called the Orgasmater, I'd be the first to try your basic button press approach.

Xander ,'Get It Done'


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."


DXMachina - Feb 04, 2005 4:37:11 am PST #6994 of 10002
You always do this. We get tipsy, and you take advantage of my love of the scientific method.

Spade, you can't ever really be sure, and that's fascinating, but it's also very uncomfortable.

True that. I spent most of my read of TMF really disliking Spade.


Betsy HP - Feb 04, 2005 6:18:53 am PST #6995 of 10002
If I only had a brain...

They didn't list Jack Vance's The Moon Moth, so I refuse to vote.


DavidS - Feb 04, 2005 7:41:47 am PST #6996 of 10002
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

They didn't list Jack Vance's The Moon Moth, so I refuse to vote.

They had several Dying Earth stories, though.

Chandler is so not better than Hammett. He's more fun, but Hammet's flinty coldness is amazing.

I concur with this. I remember Wm. Gibson plumping for Hammett over Chandler too. I like Chandler - the similes, the snarky descriptions and snarky dialogue - all juicy fun. Hammett's very evocative but hard. It's especially notable with him when he backs off the hardness just a little - the effect is big. Like the famous last line of Red Harvest.


Matt the Bruins fan - Feb 04, 2005 11:26:49 am PST #6997 of 10002
"I remember when they eventually introduced that drug kingpin who murdered people and smuggled drugs inside snakes and I was like 'Finally. A normal person.'” —RahvinDragand

I was just thrilled that they included both Peter Beagle's "Come Lady Death" and the best of C.L. Moore's Jirel stories. There were enough really good stories I remember from my youth that LeGuin and Lovecraft didn't make the cut.


billytea - Feb 05, 2005 1:46:05 am PST #6998 of 10002
You were a wrong baby who grew up wrong. The wrong kind of wrong. It's better you hear it from a friend.

Heh. Since returning to Australia, my reading matter has been almost entirely Doctor Who novels. About thirty of them, I think.

No, really, I can quit anytime I want.


Jesse - Feb 05, 2005 6:07:50 am PST #6999 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

Hey, y'all, this week's This American Life has a segment at the Romance Writers of America conference.


Pix - Feb 05, 2005 6:18:26 am PST #7000 of 10002
The status is NOT quo.

I've been rereading all the Narnia books. Sometimes it nice to go back to the classics. Plus, how often do you get to read a seven-book series in a week?


Jesse - Feb 05, 2005 12:01:07 pm PST #7001 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

I just started reading Chandler's Farewell, My Lovely, and it's so fun! I'm not sure this is the right word, but it feels baroque to me, the amount of time he takes with everything -- I mean, it took four pages to park and get out of the car, practically! So evocative and detailed. And it actually kind of reminds me of this Pelecanos I just read, Shoedog. The first forty pages just talk about the main character's life up until now -- little bits of him traveling the world, jobs he had, women he slept with. Totally unnecessary for the story per se, but just fabulous. It's not about any of Pelecanos's other characters, but someone does go by Derek Strange's office, and of course the "good guys" are big tippers. Good stuff.


erikaj - Feb 05, 2005 12:14:58 pm PST #7002 of 10002
Always Anti-fascist!

Wrod.(Who knew shoe salesmen got so much play? What was wrong with Al Bundy then?) I kind of like following the same people, though.(And Strange and my mom? Same albums. So I can usually place the "jams"...I just bought "Soul Circus" and "Hard Revolution" this very morning...my Evil Corporate bookstore seems to prefer StrangeNQuinn to the Greeks.) "The Long Goodbye" was my favorite Chandler so far. His language is so beautiful. Fucked-up too. Jesse, have you read Lethem's "Motherless Brooklyn"? It's like Chandler meets Oliver Sacks. Very awesome. But somebody got to "crip noir" a little ahead of me.


Sparky1 - Feb 05, 2005 12:17:07 pm PST #7003 of 10002
Librarian Warlord

I've been rereading all the Narnia books.

I just re-read all of those, too. I must have read them all at least half a dozen times, but this time they were funnier than they had been during past readings.