All the things that we have lost

Literature & Language

Reading is the Ultimate Leisure activity for the body - and the best workout for the brain. Unless you're reading pap. Although I don't think of myself as having a thing for female writers, all of the authors I currently list as favorites are women:

  • Poppy Z Brite writes eloquently about many things dear to my heart: Louisiana, the South, darkness and monsters, and beautiful gay bois. Recent things I've read include Exquisite Corpse, Swamp Foetus, Lost Souls, Drawing Blood, and her Crow novel (which is surprisingly good, considering it's a Crow novel...).

  • Yet another woman with an amazing written voice is Pat Cadigan. My friend Gary Driggs (aka Visual Mark) introduced me to her work via Synners, and I want to be Gina Aiesi so badly!

  • Possibly the Grande Dame of classic SF, Ursula K. Le Guin's novels The Left Hand of Darkness and The Dispossessed are brilliant.

  • My friend and co-worker Barb introduced me to books by Connie Willis. her novel Doomsday Book is a hilarious and intelligent novel about a young woman who goes back in time to record the history of the years before the Great Plague - and winds up right in the middle of an outbreak. Her collection of short stories, Impossible Things, contains a story I read many years ago in Omni magazine, and is really incredible. Steer clear of Promised Land, however. She doesn't appear to have an official site, but there are some interviews and listings at Lycos.

  • She's better known in feminist and Literature circles than the above authors, but Marge Piercy's SF novel, Woman on the Edge of Time set me into paroxysm of joy and terror. I've enjoyed other novels by her (most recently Summer People), but not as much.

  • Another literary figure is Margaret Atwood who is best known for writing The Handmaid's Tale. The Robber Bride disturbed me horribly, but I think it was brilliant. Cats Eye was also excellent.
  • When I'm not wallowing in the beautiful and glorious misery of total emersion into the above goddesses' works, here's some other literature things I like:

  • Wondering who to pray to for that special favor? Find out at the Saints Index

  • "Quotations are always fun," -- Anonymous

  • Shakespeare said the darndest things, including some excellent insults! Here are some that he came up with, or you can generate your own that just sound like you're a Bard with a Dirty Mouth!
  • This is just plain funny: The Jean Paul Satre Cookbook.

  • My own writing, while not great, is not your usual goth poetry o' doom...
  • I'm a Word Geek. Here's a few related sites:
  • The Hypertext Webster's Disctionary
  • ARTFL Project's Webster
  • Dictionary.Com
  • Roget's Internet Thesaurus
  • A Web of Online Dictionaries
  • The Word Wizard


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