I battle evil. But I don't really win. The bad keeps coming back and getting stronger. Like that kid in the story, the boy that stuck his finger in the duck.

Buffy ,'Showtime'


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."


Jim - Mar 17, 2005 10:21:11 pm PST #7269 of 10002
Ficht nicht mit Der Raketemensch!

Andre Norton pretty much invented the trope of the alienated teen who really is special/super-powered

Not to want to diss Norton, but John Wyndham did that earlier; Chocky and (especially) The Chrysalids. Which were the other SF books you got in school libraries in the UK along with Cat's Eye, Have Spacesuit, Will Travel and John Christopher.


Volans - Mar 18, 2005 2:14:27 am PST #7270 of 10002
move out and draw fire

My first Norton was Witch World. I didn't read Star Rangers until I was older, but it's still pretty good. I read the Witch World series at about the same time I read the Darkover series, and used to get them confused (I was pretty young), but I've since gone back and read some from each. WW much more with the sci-fi, less fantasy, and much more interesting treatment of female characters.

I think, possibly, she collaborated with -- Anne McCaffrey? -- in the late 80s on a series, which I read

Black Trillium? Some other female sci-fi/fantasy author in there also. I read the first one but didn't love it.

And I've seen all three movies, and have sometimes gone for days at a time without quoting at least one of them.


Calli - Mar 18, 2005 5:10:28 am PST #7271 of 10002
I must obey the inscrutable exhortations of my soul—Calvin and Hobbs

Oh, yeah, the Witch World series. I remember those. I liked Heinlein better at the time. I suspect that if I went back and read both again, that might change.


Lyra Jane - Mar 18, 2005 5:25:25 am PST #7272 of 10002
Up with the sun

I've seen Diner and Buckaroo Bonzai and part of Repo Man, but never read any Norton. In fact, I had never heard of her before this conversation.

Ah well.


Steph L. - Mar 18, 2005 5:27:31 am PST #7273 of 10002
I look more rad than Lutheranism

never read any Norton. In fact, I had never heard of her before this conversation.

Me, neither. I have a serious deficit in the sci-fi/fantasy reading (both YA and "adult") that seems to be a staple of Buffistas' reading diet.


Lyra Jane - Mar 18, 2005 5:36:49 am PST #7274 of 10002
Up with the sun

I have a serious deficit in the sci-fi/fantasy reading (both YA and "adult") that seems to be a staple of Buffistas' reading diet.

Me too! I read Piers Anthony when I was 14, and Orson Scott Card to impress a boy in college, and Laurell K. Hamilton because the Anita Blake books were supposed to be like Buffy, but that's pretty much as far as I got as far as contemporary fantasy/SF goes.


Connie Neil - Mar 18, 2005 5:38:47 am PST #7275 of 10002
brillig

the Anita Blake books were supposed to be like Buffy

I think Buffy manages her love life better.


Matt the Bruins fan - Mar 18, 2005 5:44:52 am PST #7276 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

Bwah!

Who could be said to have a worse one?


Susan W. - Mar 18, 2005 6:23:26 am PST #7277 of 10002
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

I have a serious deficit in the sci-fi/fantasy reading (both YA and "adult") that seems to be a staple of Buffistas' reading diet.

And me as well. Other than the Narnia books, I never read any fantasy at all growing up. In college and shortly thereafter, I read the Belgariad, LotR, and the Thomas Covenant books at the urging of cute geeky guys I was trying to impress. Those were enough to hook me on the genre, but I've always been pretty eclectic and idiosyncratic in my choices. More than with any of my other genres, I'll just walk through a bookstore and browse, rather than going by recommendations from friends, reviews, etc. Two of my favorite series (the Jaran novels and the Kushiel trilogy) even caught me first by their covers.


Amy - Mar 18, 2005 6:39:05 am PST #7278 of 10002
Because books.

I have a serious deficit in the sci-fi/fantasy reading (both YA and "adult") that seems to be a staple of Buffistas' reading diet.

Me three. My sci-fi/fantasy reading pretty much ended with A Wrinkle in Time, some Narnia, and a few assorted very light sci-fi YA's, like The House of Stairs.

The way everyone talks about the books they love, I feel like I must be missing something, but every time I think about reading about another planet or some such, I'm just not inspired. I've never even read Terry Pratchett.