Victorians! discussion
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Conversations in the Parlor
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General chit-chat and information (part 2)
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Joy
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Mar 10, 2010 07:58PM

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but what's Kindle?
I want to study English literature! :D
Honorary member does sound cool ;)"
The Kindle is one of the many electronic reading devices currently available; along with Sony's e-reader, Barnes & Noble's 'nook' and there many be others I'm missing.
We periodically bring up a debate among those have love the Kindle and those who most likely will never buy one.
I've owned one for awhile now... gosh, almost a year, actually, and my summary is..
Kindle = function
Books = pleasure
The Kindle is great for several things (light-weight, easy on the eyes, stores almost 2,000 books, books available in under a minute, etc.) but they aren't like real books is so many important ways. Ahhh... the debate rages on.

lol . . . sadly, it is rough going for Stay at Home Poets.



Welcome, Avatar of Margaret.
I think I agree with Paula's assessment of the Kindle. It's nice and fun, but it's not a book.




Paula, I remember planning for our wedding (13 years ago --- egads!), and I can assure you that you're not the only one who finds it a hassle. All the itty bitty things --- reception, band, food, dress etc. --- just drove me nuts! We should have hired a wedding coordinator.
Maybe it's a good idea for you to consider that, if you feel stressed about it?

I'm the only one in my family to ever not do the big, huge, traditional, Catholic wedding, and I have a really big family so that's saying a bit. It's not going over well but I refuse to do something that doesn't speak to who we are.
I apologize in advance for the griping to come over the next year and will do my best to keep it to a minimum :)

I had a 4 month long engagement and that was plenty long enough for me! Take lots of deep breaths and don't let you wicked step-mother ruin this experience for you (your step-mom may not be wicked, but mine is so I picture all others as such). Good luck and try to enjoy it!

Paula, I can totally relate to that, since we had a huge, traditional Catholic wedding with tons of relatives and acquaintances that we barely knew. It was wonderful, but also very stressful. That's the way it's done in my country, but I wish that we had gone a different route.
Fortunately, my parents and in-laws were pretty tactful and didn't micro-manage every detail. I hope your family will come around soon too.
Feel free to gripe anytime! : )
Paula wrote: "I feel stressed that since we told my stepmother, she has taken on that role. I had to have a serious mtg with her and my father and lay down some ground rules and they still aren't listening. I've..."
Elope, the big catholic wedding isn't worth the stress.
Elope, the big catholic wedding isn't worth the stress.

Wouldn't you know it, we have three Judys. I'm guessing Judy B.??"
I had no idea there was more than one Judy. Yes, she's Judy B.

Wouldn't you know it, we have three Judys. I'm guessing Judy B.??"
I had no idea there was more than one Judy. Yes, she's Judy B."
I just had to look at her 'read' list and it was clear. Amazing list of books she's gone through!

My area of staunch rebellion is that instead of registering for gifts we are giving people options to donate to charities of our choice. We don't need stuff but apparently this is one of the things that has upset the stepmother. Apparently people want to buy us "stuff." Why? Help out a literacy council or an animal shelter! Goof grief, charlie brown.


No, you're not! I've been married over 8 years now but although I wanted to marry my lovely husband I had very little interest in planning the wedding. I think I almost gave my mother-in-law a heart attack because i was so "yes, that one will do". I had zero interest in playing the frenzied bride-to-be. I think I was the only one who never paniced at all.

I had to crack up when I read your comment about 'eloping.' When my oldest daughter was planning her wedding, I made the offer of the wedding she wanted, or a large amount of cash if they just eloped. They chose the wedding! ;-) Good luck with that! Cheers! Chris

Glad to see you're back, Chris!!
And I would totally take the money :)

Then you'd be proud - I was very decisive this weekend, so we're making progress. Glad to hear I'm not the only bride who doesn't rush out and spend a year over the planning!

Got back from a weekend away and caught a nasty cold on the way. I'm also swamped at work, so I'll be updating the group reads and setting up nominations for the next read, but it may be sporadic. Thanks for your patience!

Got back from a weekend away and caught a nasty cold on the way. I'm also swamped at work, so I'll be updating the group reads and setting up nominations for the next read, but it may be s..."
Feel better soon, Paula ♥

I would even elope for NO money if it meant getting out of the wedding scene.

Paula, if you didn't get it settled this past weekend, do you have a trustworthy friend who could act as "gift manager"? That might do the trick, and it might make your family realize that if you have enlisted a friend to handle this, it is important enough that they back down. I think charity donations are so much more appropriate in the world today. Who needs another blender or a matching set of placemats?
I hear you on all this -- during my wedding, my family stayed out of it, however, it was a FRIEND who got all up in arms that I wasn't doing things the traditional Southern way. Can you believe it -- (I guess she decided to play the role of my mother.) ha ha And sadly, it wrecked our friendship afterward.

I would even elope for NO money if it meant getting out of the wedding scene."
I am just surprised at you -- E-man! ha ha



We haven't read it as a group yet but it usually gets nominated on a regular basis. I agree - fabulous book and one I'm sure Margaret Mitchell was somewhat familiar with when she wrote her famous book. Not that MM stole all the ideas, but the characters are just sooo similar!


If GWTW's characters are similar to VF's, who is the Rhett Butler equivalent in VF? Rawdon Crawley?

I don't remember that much about GWTW since I read that more than 15 years ago. What situations are similar? I couldn't think of anything except for the burning of Atlanta/Waterloo scenes.

I love Vanity Fair, but have not yet read Gone with the Wind. Will I be disappointed?





yea i feel the same way.. nothing like holding the book while reading...

The aristocracy in VF is not noble at all, they're degenerate and corrupt, from the creepy Crawleys to Lord Steyne. The newly rich, status-obsessed Osbornes are also no better. The Southern land/slave owners in GWTW is presented as heroic survivors, despite their personal foibles.
Thackeray's book is a social satire, while GWTW is a nostalgic look at a romanticized past. Virtually none of the main characters in VF is likable, except for Amelia and Dobbins. And even they are not without their blemishes. No one is sentimentalized, as often happens in Dickens, every one is complex in their goodness/badness.

I think I am going to give VF a crack this summer (for some reason I always think of it as one to read in the summer - why is that?)

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