Katelyn’s Comments (group member since Jan 07, 2016)
Katelyn’s
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from the Our Shared Shelf group.
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http://youtu.be/scO9gIpR8BI
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I agree, I'd really appreciate an elaboration on this. Given the backlash today in the media and social media, I think she's going to have to face the music on this sooner rather than later. But either way, I'd like to know why she would make such a careless statement that denies the political agency of young women and assumes that they are unable to think critically.
I loved the book. I am baffled by this interview with Bill Maher.

On the website: When you update your status, the word "page" should be a link. If you click it, it will change to percentage!
On the app: To the right of the space where you type in page number, it also has a button for percentage, and you can choose either option!

Let's celebrate and show the world what we've accomplished with #Happy100kOSS !!!

The Color Purple is our first fiction read, and in the interest of making everyone's experience enjoyable, please be respectful when posting spoilers.
Ways to do this include:
-When creating a new topic, please include either a spoiler warning or an indication of the part of the book under discussion (perhaps a page or chapter number).
-Use the HTML tag for spoilers (this will hide the text you include between the tags behind a link). You can find the code in the top-right (some html is okay) link above the text box when writing a comment. If the topic is already tagged for spoilers, this is probably unnecessary (unless you reference a part of the book that is further along than the topic heading indicates).
-When responding to a thread that is not already tagged for spoilers, indicate the part of the book you are going to discuss before the spoiler tags so that others can know whether it's safe for them to read beyond the spoiler tag link.
For those who are concerned about spoilers, try to use your own discretion when reading through discussions. While we can rely on one another to be respectful when it comes to spoilers, it's also your own responsibility to avoid topics about parts of the book you've not yet read if you are very concerned about spoilers!
For example, the post titled "Has anyone read the book before?" will likely contain some spoilers, as most people commenting will have read the book previously.
Hope this helps! Happy reading!

C'mon, everyone! Tweet and Insta and all that! Let's get this trending!

She might be referring to the fact that in the books, Sansa has a completely different story line that is interesting and empowering.
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Gotcha! Like I said, I chose to skip that episode.
I imagine much of the criticism is not based on book differences, but your assessment that so much of Sansa's development is in her head is an apt point. I just hated the idea of changing her storyline from the books at all, because to me, she has the most drastic and interesting character development of all. The changes in the show, in my opinion, completely disrupt and potential irreconcilably mar that trajectory :(

Just to clarify, it's a southern American dialect, not a south American dialect.
Here's a blog post about the importance of dialect in The Color Purple. There are minor spoilers, but not anything important I don't think, so it's worth reading:
http://eggplantemoji.com/2015/12/11/w...
I think people should read the book in whatever language they're most comfortable with, because that is how you'll get the most out of the book, but if you feel confident reading in English, I think the dialect is really very important to the presentation of the story, so I'd say give it a shot. Honestly, even as an American, the dialect is challenging, and I think it's meant to be a bit confusing to readers. So if it's tripping you up, you're not alone!




Sorry, that was pretty nasty but I cannot fathom how anyone thinks that is an acceptable requirement for a book club... We read books to LEARN. So shouldn't they want "less educated" people to read books that they themselves are endorsing? What a bunch of elitist crap!!!
The only thing I could think of is that they're reading dense, theoretical/academic-style texts that the average person wouldn't really want to read? Doesn't seem like a reason to exclude anyone, though. I would just think that people would just not participate if they didn't like the type of books being read.
Lynn, don't let 'em get you down. Doesn't sound like you are ;) Have you checked the "Meeting Up" section here on Our Shared Shelf? Maybe people in your area are getting together to discuss the books we read here!

I was so wrong! It really holds up! Other than some stereotypes about feminists and gay men, which are played for laughs but aran't really acceptable jokes 15 years later. But overall, I thought it was really empowering. It also comes from a really truthful place. Elle (and Vivian as well) is not someone who has always been a "feminist." She sort of has a revelation and evolves into a feminist character. It makes it clear that anyone can overcome these gendered expectations and stereotypes, even those most entrenched in them, without having to sacrifice the things that they like (pink, cute lil dogs, etc.).

Cersei/Jaime at the altar. And the show runners refused to concede that the scene was done poorly. They just said something alone the lines of "No, you misunderstood. She definitely wanted it." but she never consented!

Last I checked, there's still a large portion of the population that assumes that if a woman isn't cautious, then she was "asking for it."
So, yeah, it's not our responsibility to act totally cool when our privacy or safety are violated, just because we're trying to achieve equality. The systemic barriers and injustices need to be dealt with first.
Our caution is not evidence that equality can't be achieved, it is evidence that we must keep working toward it because it hasn't been achieved yet.
That all being said, I don't disagree that the later "reveal" that the driver was trans seemed dealt with a bit strangely to me, but she shouldn't be expected to apologize for her initial reaction to a (person who is read as a) man's invasive and inappropriate questions within a small space in which he has control.