le weekend

Jun 03, 2007 12:59

Things achieved this weekend:
  • marking of the last few vampire essays (v. bad);
  • one SCA event including singing (nice event, got bitten on the thumb by a candlestick, making it difficult to hold a pen; singing OK except for me, as this cold has given me a frog in my tonsils and then chased it backwards down my throat like a small dog down a rabbit ( Read more... )

linkery, aargh, sf, sca, teaching, books

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Comments 5

anonymous June 4 2007, 11:08:44 UTC
If you like Stephanie Plum, you might like the Spellman Files even more. Or maybe not. They're really very, very different... but I like Izzy Spellman much better. She's more screwed up, in more interesting ways. Anyway, give it a go, it's a first novel and that shows, but terribly funny.

scroob

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extemporanea June 4 2007, 12:20:53 UTC
I really enjoy Stephanie Plum because she has an extremely and often comically disastrous life without actually being a total ditz - she's a wonderful antidote to Bridget Jones, whose hopeless inutility I utterly abhor. Also, the supporting characters are wonderful - the family vignettes, local eccentrics and Ranger, who won my heart utterly by communicating mostly through the word "Babe!" given different meanings in context. The Spellman Files mad family stuff sounds similar, and great fun - I'll definitely look out for it.

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anonymous June 4 2007, 13:38:35 UTC
Yeah, Izzy Spellman is pretty much the anti-Bridget. Have problem? Solve problem. Solve it in creatively disastrous and dysfunctional ways, yes, creating even more problems; but at least don't just sit there counting calories. Plus, the opening pages are sheer genius.

I picked that book up at random from the pile of free proof copies lying around at work; there are always bunches of debuts and fantasy novels (mostly young adult) that nobody else wants. If I didn't restrain myself I would quickly have a house overflowing with books I don't have time to read. But I'm glad I picked that one.

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wolverine_nun June 4 2007, 11:37:17 UTC
The persistent motif of Winton’s autobiographical discourse is self-inflation.
Heh. Loved every word.
I rarely follow your links as they eat up too much of my time. I'm glad I followed that one :)

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extemporanea June 4 2007, 12:30:36 UTC
Glad you enjoyed it. I came to it expecting an actual discussion of an actual sf author I hadn't happened to hear of before, and the mad lateral invention dawned on me only slowly. There's quite a fun comments thread on Scalzi's blog, Whatever, in which his more or less insane readers add to the myth.

I'm only giving you more time-wasting links because you absolutely need to be distracted from worrying about your thesis. Honestly!

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