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Arts & Entertainment Give meaning to your life or distract you from it for a while |
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#1 |
Person who doesn't update the user title
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Southern California
Posts: 6,674
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Most remarkable departure from my usual nonfiction these days (must hurry to finish What's So Great About Christianity, D'Souza 2007, before it's due back) is a couple of mysteries. There's a rather charming English-village series that for convenience should be called the Aunt Dimity series... and Aunt Dimity's a ghost who communicates through her personal blue ledger book, in a copperplate hand. Sundry and assorted, even concatenated, intrigues plus slice-of-life in the wholly obscure village of Finch. They're not always murder mysteries. There is the occasional, um, vampire. Or is he? Or she? Or...? By Nancy Atherton.
I'm giving a first try to a series set in late 13th century England that begins with Satan In St. Mary's, P.C. Doherty 1986. I'm comparing it against Ellis Peters' Brother Cadfael stuff. It seems more vivid in its sense of time and place -- which early Ellis Peters isn't, could be any time and place -- but the writing suffers from a few too many modifiers. If I like his plotting and historical sense enough, I'll see if he cures that problem and generates leaner prose. I recently read somewhere that romance novels are relationship porn for women, as contrasted with the copulatory porn men are likelier to read, both being literarily pretty exiguous and hence disposable reading. And that does a lot to explain yaoi. It may be copulatory, but it's very much a relationship story, without which the buttsex would be deadly dreary. And where copulatory and relationship porn slide together is lesbian erotica -- popular with anybody with a visceral appreciation of women.
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Wanna stop school shootings? End Gun-Free Zones, of course. Last edited by Urbane Guerrilla; 07-13-2009 at 12:51 AM. |
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#2 | |
Larger than life and twice as ugly.
Join Date: Apr 2004
Posts: 5,264
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Quote:
--------------------------------- Recently finished "Crucified" from Michael Slade. "Germany: a bulldozer on a construction site uncovers the remains of a Second World War bomber and so begins a treacherous international journey from the crucifixion of Jesus at Golgotha to modern archaeological discoveries. Lawyer/historian Wyatt Rook and Liz Hannah must solve a series of whodunits to unravel the Judas puzzle. Blocking them at every turn is the "Legionary of Christ", a crusader backed by a secret inquisition that will stop at nothing to make sure the Judas puzzle remains unsolved." Also The Big Book Of Freaks and The Big Book Of Weirdos. Thus completing the 17 volume set.
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We must all go through a rite of passage. It must be physical, it must be painful, and it must leave a mark. I have no knowledge of the events which you are describing, and if I did have knowledge of them, I would be unable to discuss them with you now or at any future period. ![]() ![]() Don't waste your time always searching for those wasted years |
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