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Steve Barancik, screenwriter (The Last Seduction). All
I ever read is scripts! Now it's Absolutely Fabulous Two: The
Complete Second Season, by Jennifer Saunders. Absolutely
Fabulous is a British sitcom about the most decadent characters
you've ever seen--two middle-aged women who're superficial to
a fault. All they live for, the only thing they care about, is
material goods. I'm just in awe of Jennifer Saunders as a screenwriter.
People bad mouth TV, but I think she's a brilliant writer. She
wrote the first eighteen episodes herself. Unlike American TV,
they don't have a staff of writers, it's just Saunders, and to
top it off she's also the lead in the show. Her sense of humor
is brilliant, cynical, anarchic and everything else good. I'd
recommend the book to everybody and even more so the show, which
you should watch on tape, with remote control in hand so you can
rewind the parts you miss. The difference between this and American
sitcoms is that Saunders so obviously doesn't pander. She hasn't
had to give in to executives who want to maximize their audience.
She hasn't had to tone anything down. When you watch AbFab
you can see what artistic freedom is and can be in TV in its purest
form. It makes Seinfeld look moral.
Charlie Harris, Manager of Fantasy Comics. I read all the
time. I read when I'm walking, I read when I'm in line, I read
when I'm riding a bicycle. People always honk at me for that so
I try to take the back roads. I'm on my twelfth book so far this
year and this one is probably the worst. It's The Curious Eat
Themselves by John Straley, an author people are comparing
to Tony Hillerman though there's really no comparison. I'm about
50 pages from the end now and it took about 150 pages to get good.
It takes place in Alaska. It's a murder-crime-mystery, with environmental
problems with an oil tanker as a subplot. It deals with the Alaskan
Native Americans quite well, but other than that it isn't that
great. A good book I read recently was Amy Tan's The Hundred
Secret Senses. It was really nice, I'd definitely recommend
that. As for comics, a good one that came in recently is called
Lakota: An Illustrated History. Sergio Macedo wrote and
painted it. It's a beautiful book, fully painted and well-researched.
It deals with the spiritual as well as the historical legacy of
the Lakota people from 1860-1899.
Bob Log III, Film Projectionist, Man-About-Town. I'm reading
Nick Carter, Killmaster: The Korean Tiger, by Nick Carter.
It's a spy novel but dirtier and more violent and stupid. It's
part of a series of really, really, really low-budget, bad spy
books with lots of killing and far too much sex. There are about
150 different ones; this is the Korean one. I'm on page 10 and
Nick Carter has had sex with three people and killed two people
and thought back about how he's killed some other people. He mostly
has sex with women but he refers to animal sex occasionally--there's
one woman kind of being raped by a tiger, but that's in another
book. Occasionally he saves America but that's not really why
you read it; you read it for sex and people dying. They're mostly
from the sixties, and I get them at St. Vincent de Paul, which
has an extensive selection of Nick Carter, Killmaster in
the back. Every book has a picture of his head cut out--just his
head, no neck--up in the corner. He looks like a Ken doll. I've
read, like, 30 of them, and I'm not going to stop until I've read
them all! If anyone wants to borrow one they can just come over.
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