Bored. So very bored. How could I be bored by a novel with such excellent clothes values and worldbuilding?
'Serenity'
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."
I will brave the scorn of the Buffistae to say: Yes! Send me free book! I am mildly fond of it and don't have a copy.
Like I said I enjoyed Kushiels Dart for what it said about the potential of the author than for the book itself. As a speed reader, I'm not so easily bored - I get through the boring parts quickly. And I enjoyed the philisophical base. And I really think in the last books (which contains some stuff that I think will squick even the very strong stomached0 she gains more control of her materials - a bit too late for this series. But I'm really curious to see what she does in her second work, in a new universe unconstrained by mistakes she made in this one. I also have a feeling that her gift may be for shorter works, one volume,not multi-volume novels - that she is one of those artists who does better on a smaller canvas.
(Plonks self down in the Vanilla Buffista area next to Consuela. Eyes others suspiciously for signs of inappropriate romantic behavior.)
Thank you Buffistas for validating me! Even Micole, since you said you are mildly fond of it, which is better (for me) than saying it's the best thing since the invention of creme brulee, or something. Since you have such good taste in things I'd hate to really dislike something you loved.
And I'll try to send it off, just, um, you know me and shipping things, right? It may take a while.
It'll be a very late birthday gift. Speaking of which, Happy Belated Birthday!!
t begins casting flirtatious looks at Consuela in order to confuse Katerina
Carey's next project is the "Banewalker duology" and the one after that is the "Imriel trilogy" (set in the same world as the Kushiel books). I don't think she's planning to do standalone novels anytime soon, and I don't think it would actually benefit her artistically to do so -- she's clearly interested in a broad canvas. I just think she needs to get better at depth of world-building to match the expanse of her rather picaresque epic plotting.
And thank you, Suela! No rush.
So, I bought the new LKH Merry Gentry novel, because I really needed a wallow.
Is this a third one, Betsy? Huh. Didn't know it was out. Maybe I'll hit the B&N and spend some time reading, one of these evenings...
Rhiannon, thank you, ma'am; it's been enough of a cruncher these past couple of weeks to where I'm now drowning myself in an orgy of Simenon. Lots and lots of 1950s Paris. Yes indeed. And psychological why-done-it stories.
I know I'm not happy when my bedtime reading starts out with "Maigret and the Killers" and progresses to Nicholas Blake's "The Beast Must Die" and pauses for Shirley Jackson's "The Haunting of Hill House." All superb books, none of them bedtime material, unless you sleep on a bed of nails and wear hair shirt pajamas.
Oy.
I am not in the least vanilla, but I am now and likely will be forever unable to participate in Kushiel discussions.
Micole, belated birthday wishes (it's not in the Buffista Calendar). May it be a wonderful year with lots of great books in it.