Aug 31, 2008 11:38
Since everyone THREADED LIKE MADMEN yesterday, I'm gonna make this simple.
Book recs: things you've read lately, old favorites, things you can't believe aren't represented in the game, whatever you'd like. Tell me what to reeeeeead.
weekly entertainment
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Anything by Esther Freisner. Seriously, anything.
Douglas Adams is a no-brainer. Elizabeth Peters to get someone non-sci-fi-fantasy-humor on the table. She's romantic-murder-mystery-humor. Robert Rankin, to go back to the absurdist fantasy folks, especially his Brentford Trilogy (all five of them, but he stole that shtick from Adams).
To get more "literary", Michael Chabon (The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay and others ( ... )
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Robert Rankin! *squeees*
Esther Freisner is a lot of fun and I thought for the longest time I was the only person who really enjoyed her stuff.
Never tried Chabon. Will have to do that sometime.
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Personally, I think Tommy's solution to vampires is the BEST THING EVER.
I honestly think his earlier work is stronger. I enjoyed Fluke, but not on the same level as Island of the Sequined Love Nun and Lust Lizard of Melancholy Cove. I still need to read Dirty Job (it's on my shelf, I've started it, I just keep not picking it up again).
If you ever want to see me go into "I took far too many literature and religious studies classes in college for my own good" mode, ask me what I really think of Lamb.
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And I'll have to try the earlier stuff.
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The short answer to what I think of Lamb is that the first two-thirds or so of the book are utterly brilliant and wonderful. And then he gets to the stuff covered in the gospels, and Joshua loses all sense of personality he had in the rest of the book as Moore starts backpedaling like mad to make sure he doesn't piss off any Christians.
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Backpedaling. It makes me sad back when Chaucer did it and it makes me sad now. Then again, I've noticed that when someone doing something like that hits the part that's actually actively covered, they have problems. Maguire goes a little wonky when he hits the sections that actually involve Dorothy, like he doesn't know what the hell to do with her. Maybe it's not just the backpedaling (I don't doubt the backpedaling) but also just that when you have more canon to work off of, it can be harder to work in what you've done.
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Of course, I also think that he could have been true to the synoptic Gospels without losing the energy of the character. People think that because we have the Gospels, the story is completely told and there's nothing that could be added, but if you ever actually read the things? They're drier than hell. The story is there, but it's so sunk within the two thousand year old language and lofty parables that it's practically obliterated. The Gospels are about the message of Jesus, primarily, and about other people's reactions to Jesus. There is very little about the man, himself.
Even without losing the focus on the message and the reactions, you can still retell the gospels (or at least one at a time) without lobotomizing your main character. Just look at Godspell. I'd point to JCS, but, well. Pilate and ( ... )
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I can't speak for the synoptic Gospels as I haven't read them. ^_^
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When I write, I tend to be very character-based. When I read, well, it depends on what they're doing. I can't say I like one thing or another, but I will say that I will read a bad book for a good character, but I will not read a good book if I can't stand the character, so I guess there's that.
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