Recent readings

Jun 09, 2003 11:17


Ok, so right now I'm reading Pattern Recognition by William Gibson, and it's eating my brain. Considering that I've been up for an hour and a half, it's amazing I haven't read more yet today, but I've been being all communicative, writing email to beanworks, only to get distracted by IM with joyquality and siobhan1. Also I've been drinking tea (mmm, Earl Grey) and ( Read more... )

food, witchworld, friends, writing, books, comics, tea, reading, editing, eating

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Comments 7

bellwethr June 9 2003, 12:14:46 UTC
Alan is definitely awesome! I recommend his League of Extraordinary Gentlemen comics highly as well--although they are not to be confused with the movie of a similar title coming up this summer. :( To quote a very funny actor, "Alan Moore is rolling over in his-not-quite-dead-yet grave."

I've got a couple issues of Promethea that I haven't touched yet, but I will get around to reading someday soon. One of my friends (7th_son) is a huge Alan Moore fan, and turned me on to him in the last few months.

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pmb June 9 2003, 12:33:12 UTC
Have you read From Hell and Watchmen? Those are both the best Alan Moore comics I've read, as well as quite possibly the best comics I've ever read. (Fighting with the Sandman series for top spot)

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bellwethr June 9 2003, 12:53:43 UTC
Yes on Watchmen--it's sitting in the corner of my peripheral vision as I type; I haven't read From Hell though I've heard it's quite good!

I'm currently on vol. 2 of Sandman, and loving it! :)

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goteam June 9 2003, 12:58:51 UTC
Alan Moore is a freakin' genius. He makes me rant about stuff I don't understand --- stuff like Story, Myth, and Magic, all capitalized because they're Big and Meaningful, I tells you. The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen is big fun, but Watchmen is absolutely brilliant, even for someone as relatively ignorant of superhero comics as myself, and Promethea --- well, I've ranted quite a bit about that already. Another really nifty piece of Alan Moore work is The Birth Caul, which is a spoken-word piece he performed once and only once, shortly after his mother's death, but an illustrated version of the text is available and it's amazing. (And now that I've described it in that way I want to compare it to Allen Ginsberg's Kaddish, because I'm a dork like that, but I digress....) I found the illustrated comic version of The Birth Caul at the Eugene Public Library and it's definitely on my list of things I need a copy around to keep studying on.

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sillygoosegirl June 9 2003, 12:47:19 UTC
Dealing with point of view can be really annoying. I've got a story I'm working on which is all from the point of view of one person, but then I got to about chapter 11 and realized that I really wanted to have a scene that would only work if it was from the point of view of somebody else. That was annoying, but I did it anyway because I really felt like I had to. I think the most useful (possibly the only useful) thing we were told in Fiction Writing last semester was not to let ourselves be stopped by the fact that whatever we want to write has already been done. I think that's good advice, and really, I'm going to get around to doing more writing one of these days...

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goteam June 9 2003, 13:03:56 UTC
"I think the most useful (possibly the only useful) thing we were told in Fiction Writing last semester was not to let ourselves be stopped by the fact that whatever we want to write has already been done. I think that's good advice..."

Me too. The problem is not that the story's already been told, it's that it's been told so well that I wonder what I can do to put an interesting (and, when I'm feeling really ambitious, meaningful) spin on it. Something I meant to mention above in my rantings about Alan Moore's genius is the quote (attributed to Moore), "All stories are true." Part of the magic (for lack of a better word) of storytelling is that it doesn't matter if a story's been told a million times before, if you tell it again and you do so well, that somehow makes it okay. Ugh. That doesn't express it very well, but I lost the thought before I could get it down. Oh well.

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