And the way she knew she was really married was when she and her husband finally combined their libraries, with all the attendant angst.
Loved that, although nothing of the sort happened at Chez Bee: fantasy and history just didn't combine well with tomes of programming lore and serious sf. DH and I have read the same novel maybe 10 times in 15 years and most of those were Harry Potter. We settled for a melange of my shelf/your shelf/shelf of very large books.
I like short stories, and I've always disliked the m/u/a ending because it made me feel the author had copped out and made me do the heavy lifting. If it's well done, I don't mind thinking it over and drawing my own conclusions, but if the answer is "almost anything could have happened," then I feel quite irritated.
What I like about short stories is that they don't have a chapter entitled, "I am Born."
Kidding. I do enjoy, though, the presentation of a character or situation where you don't get to know what happened before; you only have these little bits; and that's all you'll ever see of these people. Like impressionist paintings, or off-the-cuff photos.
Which is to say, ambiguous endings don't bother me except inasmuch as they are abused. The ending of a short story doesn't usually overlap with everything in a character's life being resolved, because the story isn't usually about a whole life. That woman who has an epiphany will still worry about her job the following Thursday.
(Except in those SF short stories where the universe is destroyed in the last line.)
A friend loaned me Son of a Witch; do I need to re-read Wicked (since it was long, long ago when I first read it) for it to make any sense?
No. You need to remove your brain and any sort of comprehensive reading skills for it to make sense.
Also, being drunk might not hurt.
No. You need to remove your brain and any sort of comprehensive reading skills for it to make sense.
Oh. Hmmm, so should I skip it?
Maybe. I don't know. I'm bitter about that book. You might like it. It is an easy read, mostly. It doesn't get as entwined as Wicked did.
Aimee, I thought you were really enjoying it when you first started reading it?
I was. The ending pissed me off and the more I thought about the book, the more I got mad at it.
Ah, the story that made me wish I could go back in time and prevent Ray Bradbury from signing away the movie rights.
Even if you'd come back to the present to find that Paris Hilton was now President?
Even if you'd come back to the present to find that Paris Hilton was now President?
Sadly, that might be an improvement.