It's hard to adapt Roth to film because his books are all so dependent on narration. They're often about internal dialogue, not external.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 6:04pmSuch a long time since I read AP, but, yeah, I liked it. The film adaptation was pretty limp, tho.Kory wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 5:47pmI don't think there can be any question of that after the last four years.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 5:10pmPolitical leaders do matter for encouraging and discouraging behaviours.
I hope you like Communist. I haven't read it in a while, but it's considered part of the trilogy that also contains American Pastoral, which I recall you saying you liked.
Whatcha reading?
Re: Whatcha reading?
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Re: Whatcha reading?
Did you watch HBO's Plot? The Boss and I were fully captured by the atmosphere of dread.Kory wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 6:27pmIt's hard to adapt Roth to film because his books are all so dependent on narration. They're often about internal dialogue, not external.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 6:04pmSuch a long time since I read AP, but, yeah, I liked it. The film adaptation was pretty limp, tho.Kory wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 5:47pmI don't think there can be any question of that after the last four years.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 5:10pmPolitical leaders do matter for encouraging and discouraging behaviours.
I hope you like Communist. I haven't read it in a while, but it's considered part of the trilogy that also contains American Pastoral, which I recall you saying you liked.
"Grab some wood, bub.'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
Re: Whatcha reading?
Yeah we both watched and liked it here, too. The casting was great, and I was so pleased when they included my favorite line ("pulla the trig") I thought it was interesting how they set themselves up for a potential second season—I don't know where they would take it or why, but I guess Handmaid's Tale has created a new market for shows that write sequels to books.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 6:34pmDid you watch HBO's Plot? The Boss and I were fully captured by the atmosphere of dread.Kory wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 6:27pmIt's hard to adapt Roth to film because his books are all so dependent on narration. They're often about internal dialogue, not external.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 6:04pmSuch a long time since I read AP, but, yeah, I liked it. The film adaptation was pretty limp, tho.Kory wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 5:47pmI don't think there can be any question of that after the last four years.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 5:10pmPolitical leaders do matter for encouraging and discouraging behaviours.
I hope you like Communist. I haven't read it in a while, but it's considered part of the trilogy that also contains American Pastoral, which I recall you saying you liked.
"Suck our Earth dick, Martians!" —Doc
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Re: Whatcha reading?
I really dig Zoe Kazan. While far from conventionally attractive, she has a real charisma in the things I've seen her in.Kory wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 6:47pmYeah we both watched and liked it here, too. The casting was great, and I was so pleased when they included my favorite line ("pulla the trig") I thought it was interesting how they set themselves up for a potential second season—I don't know where they would take it or why, but I guess Handmaid's Tale has created a new market for shows that write sequels to books.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 6:34pmDid you watch HBO's Plot? The Boss and I were fully captured by the atmosphere of dread.Kory wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 6:27pmIt's hard to adapt Roth to film because his books are all so dependent on narration. They're often about internal dialogue, not external.Dr. Medulla wrote: ↑18 May 2021, 6:04pmSuch a long time since I read AP, but, yeah, I liked it. The film adaptation was pretty limp, tho.
I'd rather no sequel or second season be produced. The story was told and told well.
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Re: Whatcha reading?
18) The Pillow Man - Martin McDonagh. Play. 2003. From the writer of In Bruges. A writer in a Totalitarian state is interviewed by the secret police after a series of child killings share all the details from the fairytales he writes. A good black comedy, I like the way McDonagh writes dialogue. I think he had some maturing to do after this artistically. His best piece so far is Three Billboards with Woody Harrelson.
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Tub readin'
Read this around twenty years ago. Apparently I liked it enough to buy several other novels by Thorne, but oddly enough I don't remember much about any of them, let alone whether I actually liked them. Anyway, the premise is that a 20-something working in a call centre is forced by financial trouble to start covertly living there.
Read this around twenty years ago. Apparently I liked it enough to buy several other novels by Thorne, but oddly enough I don't remember much about any of them, let alone whether I actually liked them. Anyway, the premise is that a 20-something working in a call centre is forced by financial trouble to start covertly living there.
"Grab some wood, bub.'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
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Re: Whatcha reading?
19) The Invisibles: Book 1 - Grant Morrison. Comic. 1994. A blast of pop art inflected magickbabble which tells engaging, high stakes stories with believable characters. I had a great time with this, a huge influence on the Matrix, but, you know, actually good. He writes with his head deep into a different era of psychedelia, but what I found myself mostly impressed by was how much its feet were safely on the ground.
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20) And What Do you Do? - Norman Baker. Paperback. 2020. Non-fiction book about the British Royal family, and how they take the piss financially, constitutionally and hanging out with Jeffrey Epstein-ally. It's remarkable how much power they quietly wield still. Not just the Queen, but Charles and William and all the little hangers onners. It's a real "read this and get angry" kind of book. Written by Lib Dem MP who is also a privy councillor, there's respect shown for the Royals' private life but not the way they use public funds or blur the lines between the two. These people are so rich and stingy and taking an increasingly large amount of subsidised money from the taxpayer.
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This arrived yesterday, so I immediately devoured it.
This is the second graphic novel from Brubaker and Phillips starring their new noir character, Ethan Reckless, a former FBI agent who infiltrated a New Left terrorism group and emerged burned out and alienated. In these stories, he's become a kind of go-to, unofficial private detective who'd rather watch movies in his indie cinema. Historical context is big with these stories, with sinister cults and drugs in the 1960s hangover. Really good stuff for noir fans. Both books would work well as films.
This is the second graphic novel from Brubaker and Phillips starring their new noir character, Ethan Reckless, a former FBI agent who infiltrated a New Left terrorism group and emerged burned out and alienated. In these stories, he's become a kind of go-to, unofficial private detective who'd rather watch movies in his indie cinema. Historical context is big with these stories, with sinister cults and drugs in the 1960s hangover. Really good stuff for noir fans. Both books would work well as films.
"Grab some wood, bub.'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
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Audiobook:
New book by Lewis, which was inadvertently presaged by his last book, The Fifth Risk, which was about preparedness in the US government for any number of disasters (e.g., nuclear accidents) and how negligent the Trump gang were toward that work. And then comes along a new virus. So this is about the efforts of medical experts and their efforts while being stymied by the goons.
BTW, having finished Loomis, I highly recommend it. It's a survey work, but it's especially accessible and a fine example of a historian doing advocacy work. He doesn't shy away from how labour has fucked itself—thru racism, sexism, corrupt union leaders—but that the assertion of worker rights is a core theme of American history and life.
New book by Lewis, which was inadvertently presaged by his last book, The Fifth Risk, which was about preparedness in the US government for any number of disasters (e.g., nuclear accidents) and how negligent the Trump gang were toward that work. And then comes along a new virus. So this is about the efforts of medical experts and their efforts while being stymied by the goons.
BTW, having finished Loomis, I highly recommend it. It's a survey work, but it's especially accessible and a fine example of a historian doing advocacy work. He doesn't shy away from how labour has fucked itself—thru racism, sexism, corrupt union leaders—but that the assertion of worker rights is a core theme of American history and life.
"Grab some wood, bub.'" - Richard Nixon, Checkers Speech, abandoned early draft
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*TheySilent Majority wrote: ↑24 May 2021, 8:58am19) The Invisibles: Book 1 - Grant Morrison. Comic. 1994. A blast of pop art inflected magickbabble which tells engaging, high stakes stories with believable characters. I had a great time with this, a huge influence on the Matrix, but, you know, actually good. He writes with his head deep into a different era of psychedelia, but what I found myself mostly impressed by was how much its feet were safely on the ground.
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Wolter wrote: ↑31 May 2021, 1:09pm*TheySilent Majority wrote: ↑24 May 2021, 8:58am19) The Invisibles: Book 1 - Grant Morrison. Comic. 1994. A blast of pop art inflected magickbabble which tells engaging, high stakes stories with believable characters. I had a great time with this, a huge influence on the Matrix, but, you know, actually good. He writes with his head deep into a different era of psychedelia, but what I found myself mostly impressed by was how much its feet were safely on the ground.
Thank you. I should have been far less thoughtless about their pronouns; I was in a two year relationship with an nb person til a few weeks ago.
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I only noticed because I stumble on Morrison all the time.Silent Majority wrote: ↑01 Jun 2021, 1:57amWolter wrote: ↑31 May 2021, 1:09pm*TheySilent Majority wrote: ↑24 May 2021, 8:58am19) The Invisibles: Book 1 - Grant Morrison. Comic. 1994. A blast of pop art inflected magickbabble which tells engaging, high stakes stories with believable characters. I had a great time with this, a huge influence on the Matrix, but, you know, actually good. He writes with his head deep into a different era of psychedelia, but what I found myself mostly impressed by was how much its feet were safely on the ground.
Thank you. I should have been far less thoughtless about their pronouns; I was in a two year relationship with an nb person til a few weeks ago.
”INDER LOCK THE THE KISS THREAD IVE REALISED IM A PRZE IDOOT” - Thomas Jefferson
"But the gorilla thinks otherwise!"
"But the gorilla thinks otherwise!"
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21) The Million Dollar Policeman - John Swartzwelder. 2012. Kindle. Frank Burly, Homer Simpson as a dunderheaded noir detective, joins the police, gets pulled into cartoon land, tries to get a witch to give details for a census and makes me laugh at least once a page. Is it possible I found this less appetising than the previous entries, or was it the mood I was in when devouring it? I'm still totally here for the guy's box of tricks. I think I'm going to enjoy everything that Swartzwelder does. The guy's a rare one of a kind.
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22) Red Dwarf: Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers - Grant Naylor. 1989. Kindle/Audiobook. I've read this, on average twice a year since I was nine years old and listened to the Chris Barrie read audiobook on cassettes a number of times, too. It's probably been about three years since I picked up the now coverless paperback but the damn thing is in my bones. A relief to learn the book is still an overachiever. Episodic, naturally, but an actually solid novel and the definitive take. The series looks so much worse in comparison, in terms of the depth of the writing.