Negative-Net-9455
Negative-Net-9455 t1_jdw7h1n wrote
Reply to comment by ngpropman in Internet Archive Loses Lawsuit Over Ebook Copyright Infringement. Here’s What to Know... by Halaku
I'd say step one is to be a good writer, like Neil Gaiman.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_jdvhq4v wrote
Reply to comment by Consoledreader in Internet Archive Loses Lawsuit Over Ebook Copyright Infringement. Here’s What to Know... by Halaku
You should tell them to get Neil Gaiman to explain it to them.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_jducq88 wrote
Reply to Internet Archive Loses Lawsuit Over Ebook Copyright Infringement. Here’s What to Know... by Halaku
Can't think of a better way to encourage piracy.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_jcav0z1 wrote
Reply to Why read Tolkien? by PM-ME-HOLES
I'll curb my initial reaction which was to not think very highly of you and try to be positive.
Tolkien invented whole language systems just to make sure his races had a depth and mythology that didn't feel off the cuff. The lore and therefore depth of the examples you mention are akin to stepping into a puddle vs swimming in the ocean.
The examples you mention have fully realised histories. Tolkien's world has history so established, concrete and utitlised it's become mythology to the characters that take part in the events of the books.
I've read all the stuff you mention and they're simply not comparable. Yes they make you feel like you've stepped into another place. Tolkien makes you feel like you actually live there, or more accurately, that your ancient ancestors did and you're reading their story which is partly about their ancient ancestors. It's so immersive the only fantasy literature I can think of that really compares is Dune.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_jac162f wrote
Reply to comment by Mad_Madman_is_Mad in Children of Time/Children of Ruin. Why one worked for me and one didn't. (Mild Spoilers) by ChickenDragon123
Don't be, it's great. I understand OP's points but I personally don't tend to slice up which characters carry the most emotion, I just enjoy the story.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_j6jzgaq wrote
Reply to comment by Naive_Possibility668 in Just me, or was IT really too long? by KnightOfPanda
There's nothing wrong with long novels. The issue with King is that he sometimes writes flabby novels.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_j6jz0gq wrote
Reply to comment by 7ootles in Just me, or was IT really too long? by KnightOfPanda
I'll happily do that. My rate is $300ph, in advance.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_j6jys71 wrote
Reply to comment by 7ootles in Just me, or was IT really too long? by KnightOfPanda
Overlong, particularly the opening act. Lazy stock King characters - The Grumpy Old Man, The Good Boy etc etc - truly awful prose on occasion. I mentioned this in a previous post on this book but when you commit a sentence like 'they darkened the darkening sky' to paper and think its good, you're in trouble.
He's showing his age too. Nothing wrong with that, he's older now, but why try and write a teenage character when you clearly can't write a teenager? It had 'how do you do fellow kids' energy running all through it.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_j6h906l wrote
Reply to Just me, or was IT really too long? by KnightOfPanda
It was, yeah.
It's a valid take on a lot of his middle-career work. It, Tommyknockers, Dark Half, Needful Things, the Dark Tower series etc. He got so big that I think editors got scared to actually tell him to reign it in a bit.
Thankfully, as he's got older, he's either got much better at self-editing or some editor somewhere has had the balls to tell him straight up that he's waffling and he's by and large returned to the more streamlined, better and more effective writing of his youth. Apart from the recent, dreadful Fairy Tale of course.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_j5t6ouc wrote
Reply to ‚Top picks for you‘ by Goodreads by Lizardine
It's owned by Amazon so it's essentially a marketing tool to collect, store and sell your data and push whatever the publishers have paid them to promote that month.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_iyuk0rn wrote
A bunch of automated tools to fill up websites with awful crap. Just what the world needs more of.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_iyd12cp wrote
It's kissing for christ's sake.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_iy2gvrl wrote
Reply to The Wolf Hall Trilogy by Hilary Mantel by Trash_Hogan
I've just started The Mirror and The Light - I was going to give myself a Tudor-break after Bring Up The Bodies but I just had to carry straight on.
They are so good. Even knowing exactly what's going to happen it's the characters individual stories and personalities that make these books shine. It's going to be an emotional goodbye to Mantel's Cromwell. A man I've met before via fiction (C.J. Sansom's also excellent Shardlake series for example) but never had an ounce of fellow-feeling for before now.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_iuciej8 wrote
Reply to About Catch 22 by Icy-Advertising-6699
It made me laugh till I cried and it also made me cry.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_iuch359 wrote
Long term, you have to change your mindset.
Reading a novel is not about getting the salient points. It's about experiencing the entire journey the characters are on. You're not reading it for information or education, you're reading it to enjoy the whole process.
Short term, try reading some short stories. Plenty of authors have written short story collections or there's anthologies of short stories by multiple authors in a wide variety of genres.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_iua6lw3 wrote
Reply to William Peter Blatty's The Exorcist is proving to be a brilliant Halloween read... by MenitoBussolini
It's one of those rare instances, in my opnion, where the movie is better than the book.
I found the book a turgid slog to be honest and Legion was self-indulgent twaddle.
Negative-Net-9455 t1_jdw9wmr wrote
Reply to comment by ngpropman in Internet Archive Loses Lawsuit Over Ebook Copyright Infringement. Here’s What to Know... by Halaku
Yup, and tons of not very good writers become successful and wealthy. The point being, whilst piracy might affect direct sales of a particular book, there's good evidence to suggest it leads to people going and buying more books by that author. This in turn leads me to believe that piracy might piss off the publishing industry when they heavily market a particular book(s) but there's probably a net financial gain for individual authors across all their work.