Tony’s
Comments
(group member since Dec 19, 2018)
Tony’s
comments
from the Sci-fi and Heroic Fantasy group.
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The DC occult series from the early 90s - primarily Hellblazer and Swamp Thing - were certainly different, and trippy is often not a bad description. They did have some really good writing at times, and the success of those led to Sandman.

I'm about halfway through The Moonstone and enjoying it, although the pace is quite slow. I'm also reading a couple of graphic novels, but work isn't allowing much time to do anything at the moment.

My money would be on Martin never releasing Winds of Winter. Since the show wrapped up the storyline - as flawed as it was - he seems to have lost interest and now seems to be focussed on the history of the Targaryens - although he's really slow at writing them also.

I think the problem here - Australia in general, but Sydney in particular - is that rents are insanely expensive, and bookstores - second-hand or new - don't have a lot of profit margin. It also doesn't help that our tax laws are pretty broken for corporate taxes. In the early 2000s (about 2007-2009) I was managing a gaming store called the Tin Soldier. We had to move because the building we were in was being renovated. I looked around for other venues and found an excellent area close to one of the major rail stations in the city, and I knew that the place had been vacant for at least 5 years at that point. But the rent they wanted was 2 1/2 times what we were currently paying, and they weren't interested in bargaining - the tax laws meant they could make more money having it empty and as a deduction than having a tenant at a reduced rent. Eventually, it remained empty for another 4 years but eventually they got a medical centre in there. The owner of the gaming store decided it was all too hard and went back to being an accountant and the store closed.

I'm about a third of the way through The Moonstone. It's a slow pace, but well-written.



I've also been reading some Conan - only one story to go in Savage Sword of Conan Volume 17, which is the Dark Horse Comics reprint compilations of the magazine published by Marvel in the 70s, 80s, and 90s. This volume has been a bit more hit and miss than usual.

I would classify them as fantasy more than urban fantasy. For me, urban fantasy is set in our world, but with elves, vampires, werewolves etc. The Garrett PI books are set in a city, but it's a fantasy city.


You may never come across them - although book 38 in the series was published last year - but if you do, avoid the Gor series by John Norman. I haven't read one for 45 years, I guess, but back then (when there was only about 10) they were heavy on sexism, misogyny, and fairly graphic sexual violence. And apart from all that, they weren't well written - probably about the level of Fifty Shades of Grey.

I loved The Count of Monte Cristo!"
I loved The Three Musketeers, but I have never been able to get past halfway in The Count of Monte Cristo.

In any event, I'm going to put it aside for a while. I'm going overseas later this year, and won't be taking any physical books with me, so I will concentrate on reading some dead tree books for a while. I'm currently tossing up between The Chinese Parrot, the second Charlie Chan detective novel, The Moonstone often considered the godfather of the modern detective novel - along with Sherlock Holmes - and Marsbound / Starbound / Earthbound, the trilogy by Joe Haldeman.


So, like, if we put comics here, do we include serialized webcomics? Because then, I’m reading “The Knight Only Lives Once.” I’d rank it below most books I’ve read, bu..."
You can put a serialised web comic here if you like, but you might have difficulty finding a Goodreads record to link it to. Generally single issues of comics and magazines are not *supposed* to be given Goodreads records - although plenty are. At least, those were the guidelines when I applied to be a librarian here many years ago. Graphic novels, however, are certainly counted as books, and should have a Goodreads record.



Not for me - I got three books in and gave up, it just wasn't able to keep my interest.

This will fill the Non-Fiction slot in my Bingo.

I quite enjoyed reading the songs and imagining what the lyrical flow of the words would be, and what type of music is best suited to each.
Robin wrote: "Much as I love LOTR and I do, it always feels like he just took a rough compass bearing and set sail without a map, like he was on just as much of an adventure as the Hobbits."
I get the impression, from reading Christopher's commentary in the Book of Lost Tales and other sources, that the Professor continued to revise Lord of the Rings well after it was published, some of which went into the Appendices, some into various letters he wrote, and some just remained on scraps of paper waiting for his son to curate.