This right here was where I went from "this is interesting" to "this is deeply unsettling".It's funny (and scary) how the ultra-conservative takeover is blamed on Islamic radicalist strawmen even back when the book was written.
This right here was where I went from "this is interesting" to "this is deeply unsettling".It's funny (and scary) how the ultra-conservative takeover is blamed on Islamic radicalist strawmen even back when the book was written.
I never saw the movie adaptation, though I did read EE a while back and there is definitely a Lovecraftian influence on a lot of his stories. Shame if they took that out.I'm reading Everything's Eventual, another Stephen King short story collection, and I just finished the story "1408." Between this story and some other King work, I've noticed a couple things:
1. Stephen King really likes Lovecraft-inspired concepts
2. People adapting Stephen King stories either do not like Lovecraft-inspired concepts or believe TV/movie audiences won't understand them, because they get rid of it in each instance of a King adaptation I've seen. Someone correct me if I'm wrong, please.
In this case, the movie Room 1408 is pretty much just a ghost story, a haunted hotel room that makes people kill themselves. In the short story
While there is a supernatural effect on the room, the suicides are about people trying to escape what's in the room. Near the end of the protagonist's ordeal, the geometry of the room is changing so that the far wall can open into some "other place" that makes way for some slobbering hungry thing, coming in to devour the protagonist.
Nooooo . Knowing his work through movies is the worst way to know it, with exceptions you can count on one hand (The Mist, The Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile). I'm glad you went to check out some of the written stuff. Even his terrible stories are usually well-written (The Tommyknockers). The trouble with adaptation being that a lot of what works is the writing and there's no way to get the prose into a film, unless you adapt a Stephen King story in the same way as Muppet Christmas Carol.Yup, it's a pretty common theme with adaptations of his work. I was never a fan of King, knowing his work only through movies. After having read a couple of his short stories I started looking up the stories of the movies, and I was pleasantly surprised. I'm still not a huge fan, but his writing is much better than what movie makers make of it for some reason.
The movie in a nutshellI never saw the movie adaptation, though I did read EE a while back and there is definitely a Lovecraftian influence on a lot of his stories. Shame if they took that out.
Hollywood tends not to like Bad Guys/Evil/concepts/anything they can't show on screen. The whole point of most Lovecraftian horror is that some things simply can'tbe seen/comprehended/understood/etc. A looming threat in the distance isn't visceral and in your face enough.I don't understand why the Lovecraftian stuff gets pulled out. I wonder if the people doing the adapting think "oh, this is just some random weird shit" and have no concept of cosmic horror.
Can't just have a tense alien invasion movie; gotta have Tom Cruise throw a grenade up a spaceship rectum ...Hollywood tends not to like Bad Guys/Evil/concepts/anything they can't show on screen. The whole point of most Lovecraftian horror is that some things simply can'tbe seen/comprehended/understood/etc. A looming threat in the distance isn't visceral and in your face enough.
See also: War of the Worlds and a million other such movies.
AHAHAHHAHAHAAAHAHHAHHA no of course not never why would you think that?That ever happened to you? You'll jump to another book so soon after finishing another and you'll accidentally mix them together?
I dunno, I got a big chuckle about how that one shipmate of his turned out to be closeted straight, but he went through special pains to make sure she didn't ruin her career by being outed.Man, i keep trying to get through The Forever War but every time he gets an update on Earth is keeps putting me off since he's hung up on how being gay is alright and how that's weird to him and how much he doesn't really like it and OH HEY NOW BEING STRAIT IS AGAINST THE LAW KINDA fuck man, like we get it, you don't like gay people. Move the fuck on with your narrative. Oh and the one black guy in the book "spoke lik dis 'cause U kno dem blak folk don't do much talkin' like dem white folk do, suh"
kinda fuck this guy. At least Starship Troopers kept most of it's crazy to one chapter.
The sequel is worse. Basically all the surviving veterans get shipped to this barely inhabitable ice planet, they decide this is bullshit and rebel, and while they're in FTL, all humanity disappears. They land on Earth, meet a race of Transformers, then basically God shows up and says, "Yeah, I stuffed everyone into Carlsbad Cavern for some reason, now I'm slightly changing the laws of physics. See ya."Man, i keep trying to get through The Forever War but every time he gets an update on Earth is keeps putting me off since he's hung up on how being gay is alright and how that's weird to him and how much he doesn't really like it and OH HEY NOW BEING STRAIT IS AGAINST THE LAW KINDA fuck man, like we get it, you don't like gay people. Move the fuck on with your narrative. Oh and the one black guy in the book "spoke lik dis 'cause U kno dem blak folk don't do much talkin' like dem white folk do, suh"
kinda fuck this guy. At least Starship Troopers kept most of it's crazy to one chapter.
James Marsters only gets better as the series goes on too. There are a few emotional scenes that he just nails so hard.Anyone else a fan of the Dresden Files series? I read two last year and now listening to the third: Grave Peril. I'm really digging it. Even better? It's narrated by James "Spike from Buffy the Vampire Slayer" Marsters. It's the perfect tone. I get the feeling I'll plow through a few more maybe before the end of the year.
*adds to his list of audiobooks to get*Anyone else a fan of the Dresden Files series? I read two last year and now listening to the third: Grave Peril. I'm really digging it. Even better? It's narrated by James "Spike from Buffy the Vampire Slayer" Marsters. It's the perfect tone. I get the feeling I'll plow through a few more maybe before the end of the year.
I do warn you Poe, that Matsters starts out kind of sketchy in the first book, because he hasn't gotten his footing with reading the series yet.*adds to his list of audiobooks to get*
The self indulgent bit was book 44, right?I just posted a rather self-indulgent blog, listing everything I read in 2016 (both books and comics). Have a look if you'd like.
https://nickpiers.com/2017/01/01/books-comics-read-in-2016/
I deserve a fucking trophy for that self-indulgence.The self indulgent bit was book 44, right?
I appreciated it more after reading some literary essays on it.I think I said this back in March or so as well, but if you're reading t he Hitchhiker's Guide, it's worth checking out book 6.
Also, ugh, Great Gatsby. I love a lot of classics and I don't mind dated or old fashioned writing or references, but that's one book I just didn't enjoy. Along with Bonfire of the Vanities.
Oh you poor bastard. I never finished that series because it took SO long for the final books to come out under the new author that I had long since forgotten too much to follow the plot, and like hell was I gonna suffer through books 6-9 again.I just started re-reading The Wheel of Time. Because I'm sick and need to feel even worse.
I'm on book #5 right now so I'm about to get into the 900+ page per book slog that is books 6-11. Or whatever book Jordan finally was crushed to death under the weight of his own words and St. Sanderson took over, glory be to his name.
I'm pretty sure the only thing that happened in Path of Daggers was Rand fighting the Seanchan to a stalemate, and establishing which minor characters were fucking.Oh you poor bastard. I never finished that series because it took SO long for the final books to come out under the new author that I had long since forgotten too much to follow the plot, and like hell was I gonna suffer through books 6-9 again.
But if you can get through those, the action starts picking up in 10 again because that's when Jordan figured out he was dying. Then 12 on are the new author.
At least I think it was 10... maybe it was 11.
In either case, that's a hell of a slog through some absolutely torturous reading. If only Rand/Matt/Perrin was here, he'd know what to do.
Yeah he started tying up some lose ends around book 11.It's been too long since I read to remember what happened where, like I said. I only remember that the final Jordan book was a marked improvement.