Though if there had been visual aids of the James Purefoy showing the Full Monty variety back then, I might have overcome the stigma...
oh hell yeah
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."
Though if there had been visual aids of the James Purefoy showing the Full Monty variety back then, I might have overcome the stigma...
oh hell yeah
Can I just say that I second/third/whatever the "I love this board" on the above discussion? Hee. It makes me want to go be knowledgeable about Roman emporers, a subject I had no interest in 20 minutes ago!
There's a great series running currently in Slate on book hunting in Britain. (Make sure you go back and read the Mon. and Tues. entries as well.)
Today the author visits Chatsworth, and the Dowager Duchess of Devonshire (aka, the last of the Mitford sisters).
It's plummy and quirky and British and will make you all drool with the book lust.
We move on to the library, the grandest of several in the house, with its gilded ceiling, velvet curtains, and huge cases filled with the jewels of English literature and history. Noble pulls down some of the incunabula, early printed books from the 15th century. A couple of dozen Caxtons and the four Shakespeare folios went to the Huntington Library in California to pay death duties after the eighth duke died in 1908. But what's left is really not bad—the four elephant folios of Audubon's Birds of America, an Aldine of Petrarch made for a Medici princess, and 25 Groliers, which are the most beautiful and famous bindings from the 16th century. Jane Austen firsts are displayed in the famous sculpture room.
the grandest of several in the house
Several.
Whimper.
Bay Area Writers and Their Writing Rooms (Anne Lamott, Amy Tan, Daniel Handler and Lisa Brown)
Two thoughts: None of them have FrankenTim in their offices, which I do.(no wonder people say I've gotten "confessional" lately.) And I'm a big idiot because I always thought "Lemony Snicket" was a character in those books, not the author's pseud.
Good article, Hec. I just totally stole a Flaubert quote "Lemony Snicket" offered as a tag.
erika, Lemony Snicket is sort of a peripheral character in the books, if it makes you feel any better.
Huh.
Yeah, Snicket is the narrator, and a character with his own mysterious involvement in the story. There's an Unauthorized Autobiography of Snicket as sort of an adjunct to the series.
Then again, this
Handler is eleven-thirteenths of the way through a planned 13-volume gothic marathonsuggests that either the piece is dated, or the author is confused. Book 12 came out last month.