The Books thread.
- PiP
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I thought 1984 is pretty universally read at schools wrong again.
Well I've just got myself Tarkovski's Solaris but haven't watched it yet. I know Lem (the book's author) wasn't completely happy with the film, even called Tarkovski stupid, IIRC. <browsing> I'veread up on this and seems like initially Tarkovski cooperated with Lem on the script but later major parts were cut out. Solaris for me was a truly brilliant book so by all means I recommend reading it. You see Lem isn't really a sci-fi writer, he just uses sci-fi as a costume. He doesn't follow the usual pattern of sci-fi books (he actually declined Science Fiction Writers of America membership). By the way I saw the Clooney Solaris when it came out and I liked it as its own thing despite being quite different from the book.Cimmerian Nights wrote:I just saw Solaris (the original),
Is the book still worth reading after that? I heard it's somewhat different.
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I went to school in a blue state, we only read bleeding heart books by colored hippy women who work on organic communes run by rape victims that are amputees with one eye missing and clubbed feet.PiP wrote:I thought 1984 is pretty universally read at schools wrong again.
Solaris for me was a truly brilliant book so by all means I recommend reading it. You see Lem isn't really a sci-fi writer, he just uses sci-fi as a costume.
At it's best all Sci-Fi should aspire to such. It's really not about laser guns and spaceships, it should be a way to isolate the examination of the human condition. At it's worst, sci-fi is Star Wars or those wretched new Dune novels, space opera/fairy tale wankery.
I was really impressed with Tarkovsky's, it crawls along at a snail's pace though. It took me nights to watch it because I kept falling asleep during it. I've become my grandfather: put on a Bruins/Montreal game and I'm out like a light.By the way I saw the Clooney Solaris when it came out and I liked it as its own thing despite being quite different from the book.
Yeah, I'm watching it now.I recommend the 1984 movie, as well. 1984 is one of the few fictious books that I've ever read. Nevertheless, the book-to-movie adaptation was very well done; it looked and felt just as I'd expected.
Casting John Hurt was brilliant.
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- Dogmeatlives
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The best of the three? what what? Bold statement..Caleb wrote:If you like brave new world/1984...definitely check out we by yevgeny zamyatin. probably the best of the 3 in my opinion
Started Oryx & Crake by Margaret atwood. Its technically post apoc and is pretty great. Most of it seems to be pre-apoc flashbacks though.
Also I'm looking for an outer space book with a very solitary feeling to it, very in-the-head. Like a single character or smell group in a space station or something.
And some really savage fantasy. Not Conan-like really, but really really brutal shit.
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If you haven't looked into them yet, I'd suggest the Ice & Fire books by George RR Martin. It's a fantasy setting, but he writes it realistically; peasants aren't happy-go-lucky, lords and knights are often brutal dictators and savage killers instead of protectors and noblemen, and the battles are pretty savage. They're long, and the character developed is taken to the extremes sometimes, but it's balanced out with a guarentee that no character is safe from harm no matter how important he appears to the story.Dogmeatlives wrote: And some really savage fantasy. Not Conan-like really, but really really brutal shit.
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I've hard lots of good things about those books.Retlaw83 wrote:If you haven't looked into them yet, I'd suggest the Ice & Fire books by George RR Martin. It's a fantasy setting, but he writes it realistically; peasants aren't happy-go-lucky, lords and knights are often brutal dictators and savage killers instead of protectors and noblemen, and the battles are pretty savage. They're long, and the character developed is taken to the extremes sometimes, but it's balanced out with a guarentee that no character is safe from harm no matter how important he appears to the story.Dogmeatlives wrote: And some really savage fantasy. Not Conan-like really, but really really brutal shit.
I'd also suggest Guy Gavriel Kay's Tigana. No kiddy bullshit.
The Prince of Nothing is a bit brutal, but just a bit.Dogmeatlives wrote:The best of the three? what what? Bold statement..Caleb wrote:If you like brave new world/1984...definitely check out we by yevgeny zamyatin. probably the best of the 3 in my opinion
Started Oryx & Crake by Margaret atwood. Its technically post apoc and is pretty great. Most of it seems to be pre-apoc flashbacks though.
Also I'm looking for an outer space book with a very solitary feeling to it, very in-the-head. Like a single character or smell group in a space station or something.
And some really savage fantasy. Not Conan-like really, but really really brutal shit.
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I don't know if I would make the call for it being the best but I really enjoyed it! Sorry about making a callback from a couple weeks ago but I never hear anyone mention Yevgeny Zamyatin (and it's weird because his name just rolls off the tongue). I found We in a trash can while moving out of my freshman year dorm.Caleb wrote:If you like brave new world/1984...definitely check out we by yevgeny zamyatin. probably the best of the 3 in my opinion
Apocalyptically themed I've recently read The Road (super depressing but awesome) and Watchmen.
I also read several of the trashy, corny, yet weirdly engaging Dresden Files novels. And I'm currently reading The Wordy Shipmates and Notre Dame de Paris (the hunchback of notre dame) because my girlfriend is forcing me to because of the Harry Dresden novels, I think.
Good thread, BTW.
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