Note to self: religion freaky.

Buffy ,'Never Leave Me'


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."


Kathy A - Jul 26, 2005 2:48:15 pm PDT #8593 of 10002
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

JZ, thanks for the offer! But since the paperback is only $7, I decided to support my local independent and order it from them. Also, out of the six places I called, that employee was the only one familiar with the book (she's a big fan, too!). I'll only have to wait a week, which is when I'll be on vacation and have time to read it.


Lee - Jul 26, 2005 2:53:10 pm PDT #8594 of 10002
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

I hate faith.

No. Hating Faith, on the other hand, might well make you craxy.


Gandalfe - Jul 26, 2005 3:09:19 pm PDT #8595 of 10002
The generation that could change the world is still looking for its car keys.

Aimee: No, it was so that the Death Eaters, when they came thru the door, wouldn't see/kill Harry.


§ ita § - Jul 26, 2005 3:47:46 pm PDT #8596 of 10002
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

No reason Aimée can't be right too.


DavidS - Jul 27, 2005 8:43:12 am PDT #8597 of 10002
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

From Vernon Lee's (nee Violet Paget's) introduction to her Supernatural Tales, some brief, very evocative memories of her childhood in mid 19th century Italy:

Those geniune feelings of those youthful days of mine I can sometimes almost recapture, catch the swish of them vanishing in the distance of years. I mean the ineffable sense of the picaresqueness and wonderfulness of everything one came across: the market-place with the stage coach of the dentist, the puppet show against the Gothic palace, the white owl whom my friend John and I wanted to buy and to take home to the hotel, the ices we ate in the mediaevel piazza, the skewered caramelles and the gardenias and the musky, canary gaggias hawked about for buttonholes; the vines festooned over corn and hemp, the crumbling villas among them, the peasants talking like W. W. Story's Roba di Roma..."Kennst du das Land?'...a land where the Past haunted on...a land where on full mooned terraces and in company with countesses - in those Roderick Hudson days a countess was herself an exotic - you might listen to not the intermezzo of Cavalleria but mysterious eighteenth century songs, might almost hear the voice (not wicked, oh no, ever so virtuous) of Farinelli himself.

The John she wanted to buy an owl with, incidentally, was her childhood friend John Sargeant.


DavidS - Jul 27, 2005 8:46:43 am PDT #8598 of 10002
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Jilli, did you know there was LitGothic site with a listing on Vernon Lee?

And are you familiar with the work of Simon Raven (What a goth name!)

There's a gorgeously gothy cover for his novel The Roses of Picardie

Fascinating overview of Vernon Lee by Brian Stableford. Wow, she had a really interesting life.


David J. Schwartz - Jul 27, 2005 9:41:46 am PDT #8599 of 10002
New, fully poseable Author!Knut.

Why must you make me spend money, Hec? You just made me break my Amazon moratorium less than an hour after declaring it.

Yes I have a problem.

(Also: Hi!)


flea - Jul 27, 2005 9:44:23 am PDT #8600 of 10002
information libertarian

Will I be the first one to say: KNUT!!!1!


Fred Pete - Jul 27, 2005 9:48:48 am PDT #8601 of 10002
Ann, that's a ferret.

Hi, Knut!


DavidS - Jul 27, 2005 9:49:19 am PDT #8602 of 10002
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Hey Knut!

This is not how I would have imagined E. Nesbit (as described by a contemporary):

"Mrs. Bland — E. Nesbit — the popular author of "The Would-Be-Good," was always surrounded by adoring young men, dazzled by her vitality, amazing talent and the sheer magnificence of her appearance. She was a very tall woman, built on the grand scale, and on festive occasions wore a trailing gown of peacock blue satin with strings of beads and Indian bangles from wrist to elbow. Madame, as she was always called, smoked incessantly, and her long cigarette holder became an indissoluble part of the picture she suggested–a raffish Rossetti, with a long full throat, and dark luxuriant hair, smoothly parted. She was a wonderful woman, large hearted, amazingly unconventional, but with sudden strange reversions to ultra-respectable standards. Her children’s stories had an immense vogue, and she could write unconcernedly in the midst of a crowd, smoking like a chimney all the while."