Olorin_Ever-Young
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_jee5wje wrote
Reply to comment by Handyandy58 in Do you skip or skim when reading fiction? by GraniteGeekNH
Not listening to all the songs on an album, or not finishing a TV show, is in no way equivalent to "reading" a novel by skipping every other page.
That'd be like watching a movie by fast forwarding past certain scenes, or skipping the first minute of a song.
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_jee5axq wrote
LMAO, are you deliberately farming downvotes or something?
If you don't like a book, why read it for pleasure?
But moreover, why do you care so much what others think? If you enjoy reading novels by skipping every other page.... Why should anyone else care?
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_jee42ey wrote
How'd you know my birth wasn't filmed? Away with your prying sorceries!
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_jedct5a wrote
Reply to comment by BlurryBigfoot74 in Finally reading Tolkien by jdbrew
.... Wait what? How am I only finding out today that Forest Gump was based on a book? That's wild!
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_jedb9m3 wrote
Like you say, it of course various.
But unless an author has explicitly said they don't like it, I can't imagine most of them are opposed to fan mail. I know I enjoy reading folk's thoughts on my work.
As long as you're not, like.... harrasing them or something, surely it's fine?
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_je8dkld wrote
Reply to comment by SIMPSONBORT in The moon has seen everything that’s ever happened to mankind/womankind by [deleted]
"The moon has good perspective."
Yep, certified 20/20 vision.
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_je8dg24 wrote
Reply to comment by PlanetLandon in The moon has seen everything that’s ever happened to mankind/womankind by [deleted]
... Yes. But...... So you think the moon just constantly stays in one position indefinitely? And that that somehow simultaneously makes it omnipresent?
LMAO, true or not, I really enjoyed this shower post.
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_je8d29y wrote
The hell planet are you living on that the moon's constantly in your presence? What sorta Majora's Mask faffery is this?
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_iui76d3 wrote
Reply to An issue I’ve sadly been experiencing when reading fiction/fantasy more and more with passing time by whocaresfuckthisshit
The entire point of speculative fiction is to take reality, reshape it, and use the result to express and exemplify very real principles concerning humanity or the world at large. Much the same way art in general does. If you're ignoring that simply because Frodo never lived.... I don't know what to say to you. That's very unfortunate indeed.
Do you then also not understand analogies, or parables, then?
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_iu8sons wrote
Reply to comment by ActonofMAM in Why are books always changed or cut major scenes out when adapted to film? by hushpolocaps69
What about the Great Gatsby (Leonardo DiCaprio) movie, or Life of Pi?
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_iu8scl4 wrote
Reply to Why are books always changed or cut major scenes out when adapted to film? by hushpolocaps69
No kidding.
Glares at the LotR trilogy
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_iu3jsoq wrote
Reply to How do you guys read books? by HalboAngel
Wait... There are folks who can read without imagining the words spoken in their mind? How the hell does that work? If you're not "hearing" the words in some way, how are you receiving and processing their information at all?
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_iu2wk83 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in The Great Gatsby: I don't know why this book is so popular with English teachers by knerled
I love both, but I openly admit to preferring a good movie over a good book. There a problem with that?
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_iu0goi9 wrote
Reply to comment by knerled in The Great Gatsby: I don't know why this book is so popular with English teachers by knerled
The movie is so astoundingly good that I can't really imagine the book being better. Much like the Great Gatsby movie, it fully embraces the visual and auditory medium of film to embellish and extrapolate upon the story's themes in ways literature simply isn't able to. The opening scene alone, displaying the raw beauty of nature, is impossible to convey solely through words.
Still, definitely wanna give Life of Pi a read. Who knows? Odds are, it actually will somehow be better than the movie, as these things usually are.
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_iu0dpvw wrote
Reply to comment by IamSithCats in The Great Gatsby: I don't know why this book is so popular with English teachers by knerled
Out of curiosity, have you seen the Leonardo DiCaprio movie? Because I completely agree with your assessment of the book, but think the movie conversely nailed everything the book was awkwardly trying and failing to convey. The themes absolutely glow in the movie, radiant and mesmerizing, while the book plods along, tripping over its own plot and glossing over everything important.
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_iu0c2ey wrote
Reply to The Great Gatsby: I don't know why this book is so popular with English teachers by knerled
Agreed. But, probably for different reasons.
My first exposure to the story was via the Leonardo DiCaprio movie, which is breathtakingly beautiful and stunning. I was so enraptured by it that I read the book post-haste, only to find it falling flat on virtually every plot point which the movie had conversely handled so perfectly. The only reason I managed to actually derive any enjoyment from the book is because it simply reminded me of the movie.
I think it's probably the only case where I think the movie is actually better than the book. And by a flatout mile. Perhaps also Life of Pi, though I've not read that yet, just seen the movie.
And that's coming from someone who thinks the Lord of the Ring movies are an utter butchering of the source material. I'm generally not one to like book-to-movie-adaptations.
Olorin_Ever-Young t1_jee81n0 wrote
Reply to A 19 yr-old Vincent Van Gogh, photographed in 1873. The only image of him that's been verified by the Van Gogh museum. by dannydutch1
Is it just me or does he strangely look like Benedict Cumberbatch?