That is a lovely legacy to leave behind.
From Another Face of Romance for That More Better Documentary
More conversations on what drives us batty about romance novels:
Sarah: I am in the middle of glomming all the Balogh and Putney backlist I can get from Booksfree.
Candy: Good luck with the glom. I personally can’t read too many Putneys in a row, though when spaced apart she’s usually quite reliably good. Her Fallen Angels series is especially entertaining, but when they stage group get-togethers in the later novels and you see the massive conglomeration of gorgeous, wonderful people who have found other gorgeous, wonderful people to spend forever with, it gets a bit much.
Sarah: Oh my GOD yes, when the gorgeous and well-matched love couples collect in one place, it is a bit over the top. I mean, for an era of arranged matches, where are all these love matches coming from? I’d love to see a series written about a deb who enters after a Putney/Balogh/Quinn/Kleypas season where every freaking girl made a love match, and how on earth do you compete with that?!
The worst is the Quinn Bridgerton family. I love the family dynamic and I love that she has characters who behave like real siblings and aren’t just caricatures meant to drive the plot as the “jealous brother” or the “harpy sister” but gosh, get the whole clan in a novel together and you want to hurl from the full-sugar-Kool-Aid sweetness.
Candy: Yes, it’s one thing to suspend disbelief for novels that you read separately, but then to pack the results of several novels in a small space is totally gag-a-riffic. Also, when I look at all the couples and realize the extremely wacky circumstances they were involved in when they met (this ESPECIALLY applies to the Fallen Angels series, and any other series involving a group of friends who are also spies or crimefighters or whatever) I’m, like, “Doesn’t anyone fall in love with somebody introduced by a mutual friend any more?” Jesus.
The Karen Ranney series I’m reading right now, The Highland Lords (gag me with a spoon, that’s such a horrible series title) is actually somewhat refreshing because the first two books had high drama, but the third just has one of the MacRae brothers falling in love with a woman who happens to be engaged. The book was kind of padded out unnecessarily (I mean, I figured out the solution about 200 pages before it finally occurred to the main characters), but after reading two convoluted stories that involved high drama and protagonists who initially hated each other, I thought a quiet story about two genuinely nice, honorable people falling in love was a nice break.
Sarah: I totally agree with the group recollecting of past heroes and heroines - what really bugs me is that they are so wishy washy! Even if they were hell on wheels in their own stories, once they are settled into domesticated, loving wedded bliss, they are BORING. I mean, I understand not wanting a past character to overshadow your new heroine, especially if the past character was just better all around, but still, there’s no way that some of these hell raising women are now genteel images of perfection for crying out loud.
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That is a lovely legacy to leave behind.
From Another Face of Romance for That More Better Documentary
Yeah, it had some West Coast history gaps, but still--absofuckinglutely awesome. Amazingly cool. Two heterosexual thumbs up!
Awww… I always hate to see an independent business go under...I hope the old guy makes a killing!
Nah, it was Woodstock. You never apologize for Woodstock! Anyone who was actually there is incredibly proud of it. One of my friends is briefly shown in the movie as one of the naked mud wrestling women, and yep, she’s…
Somehow I’ve never seen this before. I wonder what he was on while he was singing?
I wonder if he has grandchildren now? How the heck do you explain this clip to your grandkids? “Well, it was the…
