Sweet! My co-worker just gave me a copy of the new illustrated edition of The Elements of Style! It's really nicely bound and the illustrations are beautiful and strange. Very cool.
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."
OK, I just finished The Time-Traveler's Wife. I didn't love it. It suffered some from first-novel-itis, but mostly I just didn't get what the point of it was. Am I a lameass who has no heart? I found myself more interested in poking at the science than engaged in the love story.
It's last minute Christmas shopping time. I am looking for books for a 70-year-old and an 82-year-old woman. The former seems to read some fairly fluffy things, plus things like the Left Behind series and the Milford books. The latter reads romances. Both would probably be offended if the books had too much of teh sex. Well, the 82-year-old might be okay with the throbbing member type of sex, but not the more explicit sex. Any ideas?
I can definitely recommend Nora Roberts for the 82-y.o.--she's not too explicit, and writes very well. For the 70-y.o., have you thought about autobiographies? I remember ten years ago getting the Barbara Bush one for my grandmother who had similar tastes.
Anybody who likes romances will loooooove the Pamela Harriman biography. She was a hussy who was no better than she should be and bagged most of the influential men from WWII forward; she started off with Winston Churchill's son. It's ten years old; what are the chances she's read it?
Biographies of the Mitfords (no relation to the books) and the Langstons (Nancy Astor and sisters) are always v. satisfying to romance readers. Drama galore.
I like John Wyndham -- as a teen in the UK it was pretty impossible to avoid his TV adaptations
I think there was just the one book of his that was translated into Hebrew, so I had no idea about anything else he'd written until you mentioned it. I loved that tv show as a child, and yet it never occurred to me that it was based on a book.
The only reason the author's name didn't fall through my sieve was because in a book I really loved as a kid, The Willoughby Captains", there were a couple of characters named Wyndham (two brothers).
The main character was named Riddell, and I liked him so much that whenever Voldemort's "human" name is mentioned, I have to remind myself that it's a different character.
OK, I just finished The Time-Traveler's Wife. I didn't love it.
I've just started reading it this weekend! Which means, of course, that I can't have any opinion on it yet, so I don't really have anything to respond to you, so, um, this post is not very full of content.
[Edit: Sorry for the delay in the answers. I was computer-less for a few days. This is pretty much the only thread I can keep up with anymore, and even that is because I have no idea what half the posts are talking about.]
[Another Edit: Am-Chau! It was your birthday when I was computerless, so belated wishes, and I hope you'll have a great year!]
Thank you, Nilly!
And, err, in on-topic news, I had several books for my birthday. Two about manuscripts-- The Book of Kells and the Maccesfield Psalter-- and John Hegley's The Sound of Paint Drying.
I just finished listening to an audiobook of PD James's Unnatural Causes. Started out well, but then she got coy on me, having one detective explain whodunnit to another without telling us.
As flaws in mystery narrative go, this is a big one for me, near akin to having the crime solved on the basis of truly arcane knowledge, or some detail like smell that wasn't revealed to the readers.
Is she coy like that in the rest of her work? I liked the rest of the book, but if she's going to bait and switch me in another novel, I'd rather not start.
I used to be a big fan, but I don't remember if she does that a lot or not.