Review What Book Are You Reading?

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
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Just picked this up from the library today, where it was dangling on the "New Books" shelves.......


Winner of the 2017 Ryan Tubridy Show Listener's Choice Award at the Irish Book Awards.

John Connolly recreates the golden age of Hollywood for an intensely compassionate study of the tension between commercial demands and artistic integrity and the human frailties behind even the greatest of artists.
An extraordinary reimagining of the life of one of the greatest screen comedians the world has ever known: a man who knew both adoration and humiliation; who loved, and was loved in turn; who betrayed, and was betrayed; who never sought to cause pain to others, yet left a trail of affairs and broken marriages in his wake . . .

And whose life was ultimately defined by one relationship of such tenderness and devotion that only death could sever it: his partnership with the man he knew as Babe.
he is Stan Laurel.
But he did not really exist. Stan Laurel was a fiction.

With he, John Connolly recreates the golden age of Hollywood for an intensely compassionate study of the tension between commercial demands and artistic integrity, the human frailties behind even the greatest of artists, and one of the most enduring and beloved partnerships in cinema history: Laurel & Hardy.

Have just started it. What is appealing to me that the chapters are merely 2-3 pages each, which makes the book very digestible to me. I remember whizzing through the novel of THE BEACH for the same reason. Doesn't say much for my attention span though.

Am looking forward to the STAN AND OLLIE movie soon, so this is a timely appetiser for me.
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
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A very interesting read, listing scores of pretty much forgotten authors, from August Delerth to Tom Tryon, with a dash of George Langellan, who is now only remembered for his short story of "THE FLY". And Erich Segal of LOVE STORY is thrown in there too.

Potted biographies of their lives add to the interest.

Well worth a browse.

.
 

Mad_Monster_Party

Sandbox Chief Commissioner
:emoji_blush:~ I haven't read the The Big Short but I definitely read Ken Kesey's One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. It was really good.


*~:emoji_dog2:~*




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I found an island in your arms
A country in your eyes
Arms that chain,
Eyes that lie


By: The Doors - Break on Through
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Yeah, I definitely had fun reading it!:emoji_alien:
 

chainsaw_metal1

Member: Rank 8
I just started reading Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter. I'm only about 80 pages into it, but so far, it's pretty damned good. I'm glad I watched the movie first, because I have the feeling I would have immediately hated it, whereas now, I can still view it as a good movie, just not the same as the book.
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
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Am just trying to tackle this one again....

Not doing well so far. None of the characters consistently sound quite like they should. And the author seems intent of bigging up his own rather silly concepts, such as MIND, into the narrative. Plus CARO, a pointless duplicate Orac.

It has a nostalgic, quirky charm for me, but it is far from what I would consider "The authenic sequel".
 

ant-mac

Member: Rank 9
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Am just trying to tackle this one again....

Not doing well so far. None of the characters consistently sound quite like they should. And the author seems intent of bigging up his own rather silly concepts, such as MIND, into the narrative. Plus CARO, a pointless duplicate Orac.

It has a nostalgic, quirky charm for me, but it is far from what I would consider "The authenic sequel".
I read that once...

That was enough for me.
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
Unfortunately I struggled with Paul Darrow's trilogy too - and just ended up leaping to the last few paragraphs in the third book: A notorious habit of mine.

I do intend to read the trilogy properly at some point. One day.

Paul, of course, used the book trilogy to honour how Terry Nation mapped out any miniseries sequel. So I would take the Lucifer Trilogy as how Blake's 7 concludes, should one wish to stray beyond the finale of the 52nd episode.
 

ant-mac

Member: Rank 9
Unfortunately I struggled with Paul Darrow's trilogy too - and just ended up leaping to the last few paragraphs in the third book: A notorious habit of mine.

I do intend to read the trilogy properly at some point. One day.

Paul, of course, used the book trilogy to honour how Terry Nation mapped out any miniseries sequel. So I would take the Lucifer Trilogy as how Blake's 7 concludes, should one wish to stray beyond the finale of the 52nd episode.
I think the TV series is perfect just the way it is.

It's just a shame there wasn't a season prior to the existing season one, because there were a number of background events I'd have loved to see. Blake vs Travis, Avon's attempt at theft, the rise and fall of the freedom party... so on and so forth.

But besides that, I have few complaints.
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
Well, Avon's attempt at theft was covered in AVON: A TERRIBLE ASPECT, of course (which was another book I quickly gave up on). I felt almost obliged to read it coz it was by frickin' Avon himself - but from all accounts not a lot of it gelled with the continuity of the show, despite the lead actor writing it. The Federation was apparently completely unrecognisable from the one in the show, even as a fledgling tyranny - and Anna Grant was now Avon's stepsister or something. I have never read a good review for it. And I hope Paul learned to never, ever put the word terrible in the title of a book before handing it over to reviewers. It will just end in tears! :emoji_head_bandage:
 

chainsaw_metal1

Member: Rank 8
It's just a shame there wasn't a season prior to the existing season one, because there were a number of background events I'd have loved to see. Blake vs Travis, Avon's attempt at theft, the rise and fall of the freedom party... so on and so forth.
This reminds me of how all of us Star Wars fans always wanted to know more about the oft mentioned Clone Wars, and of how Vader was seduced by the Dark Side and his final battle with Obi-Wan, and had so many things built up in our heads.

Then...Uncle George made the prequels.
 

ant-mac

Member: Rank 9
This reminds me of how all of us Star Wars fans always wanted to know more about the oft mentioned Clone Wars, and of how Vader was seduced by the Dark Side and his final battle with Obi-Wan, and had so many things built up in our heads.

Then...Uncle George made the prequels.
For me, the story had to be made in chronological order.

If the same characters are involved, they need to be played by the same actors.

I don't like the idea of going back later.
 

ant-mac

Member: Rank 9
I am going to be honest with you. I am beginning to feel like I’m on a mission now.

I will follow up on this. I already have the second book in my Amazon shopping cart as we speak.

I will finish this!!!!!! :emoji_man_dancing:
Well, I certainly hope you enjoy them. Personally, I always get a kick out of intelligent and interesting SF.

And if you do enjoy them, may I also recommend the RAMA cycle by Clarke, later Clarke and Gentry Lee and later still by Gentry Lee.

The colossal scale of that book series is simply awesome.
 
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