Mal: Then I call it a win. What's the problem? Inara: Should I start with the part where you're stranded in the middle of nowhere, or the part where you have no clothes?

'Trash'


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."


Dana - Nov 09, 2005 11:00:12 am PST #9438 of 10002
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

Oooh! Have I read book 12?


Strega - Nov 09, 2005 11:06:42 am PST #9439 of 10002

I just read it this week -- The Penultimate Peril? They reach Hotel Denoument and there's, y'know, some regrettable occurences.


erikaj - Nov 09, 2005 11:09:10 am PST #9440 of 10002
Always Anti-fascist!

I admire people that can plan like that. Whenever I write anything I'm more like "Um...stuff happens?"


Dana - Nov 09, 2005 12:06:32 pm PST #9441 of 10002
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

I forsee a library visit in my future.


DavidS - Nov 09, 2005 3:04:46 pm PST #9442 of 10002
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Margaret Atwood commenting on Pinter's Nobel.

Sitting in her publisher's west London office, Atwood sounds neither dry, nor fierce, but given rather to delighted hoots of laughter that punctuate her carefully phrased answers. She purrs with pleasure at the honour for her collaborator, whose work she admiringly described as "prickly, bothersome, mordant and dour", and as "coming up on you sideways with an alarming glare". Now, she says: "I was particularly touched by the picture of him in the paper in which he looked childishly happy - innocently happy. Which is not a look you usually see coming from Mr Pinter. He looked genuinely surprised - 'How could this be happening?' It was quite lovely."


Dana - Nov 10, 2005 6:47:53 am PST #9443 of 10002
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

Huh. 42 holds on the new Lemony Snicket at the library.

I think a lunchtime trip to Borders might be in order.


sumi - Nov 11, 2005 7:32:36 am PST #9444 of 10002
Art Crawl!!!

Ian McHugh says that the problem with fantasy is that wizards are boring.


Nutty - Nov 11, 2005 8:22:18 am PST #9445 of 10002
"Mister Spock is on his fanny, sir. Reports heavy damage."

Personally, I got no beef with Mickey Mouse, and all other wizards I will have to take on a case-by-case basis.

On another tack, O ye romance readers, how many of you read Sir Walter Scott or Alexandre Dumas? And can you express why you do/don't?


Connie Neil - Nov 11, 2005 8:23:49 am PST #9446 of 10002
brillig

The only Dumas I've read is Count of Monte Cristo. I cherish my unabridged copy that was stolen for my from my old high school's library. Edmund Dantes (the Count) gets tiresome, but the rest of the characters are fascinating.

edit: Oh, and I've read Ivanhoe. the unabridged was a whole lot more interesting than the abridged I got in school. The Ivanhoe characters were a tad more three-dimensional than the Monte Cristo characters.

I haven't read the other stories by either of them.


Sophia Brooks - Nov 11, 2005 8:29:06 am PST #9447 of 10002
Cats to become a rabbit should gather immediately now here

Nutty- I responded it movies, but I generally find I can't read Dumas or Scott. Especially Scott. I think because of the generally floweryness and density. Same thing with Henry James, actually. I must have tried to read Portrait of a Lady 15 billion times. I am not sure why, as I can read Thomas Hardy, who many people find really tough going.