trinityofone: (Default)
[personal profile] trinityofone
I’ve been really craving “culture clash” romantic comedies. I’m pretty sure this started because I’ve been rewatching The West Wing ([livejournal.com profile] siriaeve’s fault) and I was reminded of a Josh/Donna fic I read years ago where Josh, the East Coast Jew, meets Donna’s Midwestern WASP family, and amusing awkwardness and eventual romance ensue. (This is, incidentally, the story of my mother’s family—my Grandpa G. was even from Connecticut and my Grandma C. from Wisconsin!) Anyway, I can’t find this fic anywhere. Does anyone:

1) Know what the heck I might be talking about?
2) Have any other recs for culture clash rom coms—be they books, fic, films, or anything else? (Just don’t say Meet the Parents.)

Second, I used to nobly set aside a Large and Intimidating Classic to read in the summer months of July and August; this is how I tackled Ulysses and War and Peace. I want to start doing this again, but I can’t decide what book I should read. Can I beg your thoughts? (I’d make a poll but I just realized you can’t without a paid account. Pooh.)

Trin should read:

1) Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes
2) Swann’s Way by Marcel Proust
3) Middlemarch by George Eliot
4) Something else that I’ll suggest in the comments
5) The very idea of this project is incredibly pretentious and I think Trin should just read fanfic and more of [livejournal.com profile] akukorax’s Star Trek novels

Thanks, as always, for your suggestions!

(no subject)

Date: 2008-06-27 10:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] trinityofone.livejournal.com
I've read two Georgette Heyers: loved one, hated the other. But I recently got Cotillion from the library and have been thinking of reading that. Do you know that one?

*records your vote for Middlemarch*

(no subject)

Date: 2008-06-27 11:12 pm (UTC)
wychwood: G'Kar looking naughty (but nice) (B5 - G'Kar naughty)
From: [personal profile] wychwood
Hm. I think Cotillion was ok? The Masqueraders is TOTALLY my favourite, though, so it might be all down from there! I also liked (though not necessarily for culture-clash reasons) Venetia (generally considered one of her best), Black Sheep, Frederica, and - for a *very* different one - A Civil Contract, in which true love doesn't conquer anything, there is very little snappy banter or falling madly for anyone, and relationships really have to be built.

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