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John Dies at the End
John Dies At The End
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John Dies At The End - Discussion
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Lara
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Apr 01, 2014 03:01AM

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I've been wanting to read this for a while. It was going to be my December pick, but then I decided to go for something with a Christmas theme instead. Hope everyone likes it (including me)!

I actually prefer to watch the movies first, unlike most people. I find there is less disappointment then. I haven't found a movie that is better than the book yet.



Since I'm listening at work I sometimes get interrupted or sort of zone out and lose track of where/when I am.
I will be interested to see how the movie treats all the flashbacks and forwards and sideways. This might be one of the few books that I like better as a movie than a book. I'll have to wait and see.
I loved the prologue, so I'm anxiously reading through the flashbacks to find out how they got to that point.
I'm also about a third of the way through and am curious to see how the film version handled certain elements of the story.
Either way, it should make for an interesting discussion come the 28th!
I'm also about a third of the way through and am curious to see how the film version handled certain elements of the story.
Either way, it should make for an interesting discussion come the 28th!
Just a heads up! We're two weeks away from our John Dies at the End discussion.
I'm looking forward to hearing your opinions about this one, and not just because it was my pick.
Tune in on the 28th!
I'm looking forward to hearing your opinions about this one, and not just because it was my pick.
Tune in on the 28th!

Not going to finish because of time constraints, or because the book is too weird?
If it's the latter, I can say it's worth it to keep reading. The second half of the book is where it really hits its stride.
If it's the latter, I can say it's worth it to keep reading. The second half of the book is where it really hits its stride.



The key quote for me is:
“Only it turns out Hell is right here, it’s all through us and around us and in us like the microbes that swarm through your lungs and guts and veins.”
My initial thought was "a slacker Ghostbusters", which wasn't necessarily a bad thing. Aaron's "‘Jay and Silent Bob meets Ghostbusters’" is a much better description though.
Very filmic, with hints of Scream (for the knowing way in which horror tropes are dealt with), Fright Night (via the Roddy McDowall character of Peter Vincent), and Lost Boys (the Frog Brothers)
The film link also brings us back to the quote above - our horror reflects who we are, which I think is what the book is trying to say overall. I'm not sure I found it as funny as all that (although there are some genuinely funny bits), but if I wanted to get all serious about it, I would say that the book is basically a phenomenological tract, in that it is about the appearances of things, or things as they appear in our experience, or the ways we experience things. Yes, there are accidents of history (the survival of Mr Rooney being the main example in the book), but however they turn out, we, as human beings, create the world we live in, rather than experiencing something that is predetermined and external to us, and we basically get the world we deserve.
I think I now need a lay down in a darkened room...John Dies at the EndDavid Wong