Azure Jane Lunatic (Azz) 🌺 (
azurelunatic) wrote2001-06-25 12:25 am
Heinlein
Reading I Will Fear No Evil again, and am as always impressed by the new things I find in any Robert Heinlein book. Finished reading The Richest Man in Babylon (George S. Clason) last night; am beginning The 12th Planet (Zecharia Sitchin) and will see how that one goes when I can pry it away from Sis.
Have yet to read The Wizard's Dilemma (Diane Duane) but I know it's good: Godai read it, and read it straight through (unusual for him) and it is, after all, Diane Duane, one of the few authors whose books I will buy without having so much as read the cover or glanced at the cover picture. Just to know by the title that I don't already have it, and to know the author, I will buy anything by Diane Duane.
I find it interesting that some people have such a fuss about telling people their names, or their Names, yet think nothing of discussing at length their favorite books and authors. Don't they know that what you read is a very good way of measuring who and what you are?
I read :
C.J. Cherryh.
Diane Duane
Robert A. Heinlein
Lois McMaster Bujold
Anne McCaffrey
Mercedes Lackey
John M. Ford
Isaac Asimov
...among others.
There. Now, just from that recommended reading list, you know almost all about me.
Have yet to read The Wizard's Dilemma (Diane Duane) but I know it's good: Godai read it, and read it straight through (unusual for him) and it is, after all, Diane Duane, one of the few authors whose books I will buy without having so much as read the cover or glanced at the cover picture. Just to know by the title that I don't already have it, and to know the author, I will buy anything by Diane Duane.
I find it interesting that some people have such a fuss about telling people their names, or their Names, yet think nothing of discussing at length their favorite books and authors. Don't they know that what you read is a very good way of measuring who and what you are?
I read :
C.J. Cherryh.
Diane Duane
Robert A. Heinlein
Lois McMaster Bujold
Anne McCaffrey
Mercedes Lackey
John M. Ford
Isaac Asimov
...among others.
There. Now, just from that recommended reading list, you know almost all about me.

no subject
potential romantic thing, I check out the book-
-shel and the CD collection. Most people don't
realize how much that reveals.
And if they don't have books in their house?
I'm the HELL outta there.
the top two pick-up lines:
"Ooooh! That's a good book you're reading!"
Very rarely had these lines backfire on me. They've rarely gotten me to "score," but ... isn't a good conversation better than scoring any day? They've rarely failed for a good conversation, or at any rate an exchange of knowing glances.
Re: the top two pick-up lines:
Then again, I'm wired differently than most guys,
when it comes to romance. I'm much more likely
to go after someone who is average-looking, but is
intelligent and that I can talk to, than someone
who is drop-dead gorgeous but dumber than a box
of hammers. for me, attraction is far more
mental than physical.
Scoring
I can't judge if a person is attractive or not until after I've spoken with them, unless they fall into one of my (very narrow and very odd) preset categories of physical beauty, and then they'll only stay in that category as long as they prove themselves worthy to stay in it.
What's considered "beautiful" by mainstream America doesn't usually get on my second glance list. A really good book does. A literate joke does. A bad pun does. Glasses and long hair do. Visible science fiction/fantasy/anime/witchy stuff does.
A good conversation is better than picking up some stranger and doing the nasty by far. Lovers are easier to get than old friends.