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I made fun of how none of the Scooby Gang would die in this book (others died), but Buffy the Vampire Slayer was all about death, or avoiding death.

Survival amongst death, for some.

Strong women dealing death to demons.  Demons dealing death to everybody else.  Strong women saving the world.

And Buffy never gets a man, relationships never work on Buffy, it's part of the narrative tension of some US TV shows, that relationships never work, like Sex in the City,

But it was good to have strong single people represented.  To have a woman who is not defined by her husband represented.  Despite whatever assholishness Joss Whedon has committed, he gave us this cultural representation of strong single women and a lesbian couple!, and he gave us cultural representation of grief,

We grieve poorly in the US.  We do not pay enough attention to our ancestors and the cycle of life.  The past and the future.  What we will leave behind, and those who are left behind.


m_d_h: (Default)
The first 30 pages of this 230-page supermarket-format paperback were spent laboriously introducing the characters, as though somebody who had never watched Buffy the Vampire Slayer would randomly purchase this book while idling through the checkout lane.

But at page 50 it is starting to pick up.

Just ordered lunch, will have to wait two hours after eating before resuming the toy play (because GERD) so we'll see how far I get.

To finish books I have to spend time finishing books.  But the Internet!

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[UPDATE]  This book has me laughing out loud repeatedly!  And also worried about who's gonna get killed next.  Of course, they can't kill off any member of the Scooby Gang, we know that.  This feels like 2nd season, yeah, 2nd Season stuff.

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