Profpointy
Legendary Member
THe book was great but the film managed to miss out 2 of the 3 main events
Yebbutt Natasha Kinski does get her kit off which is the main thing
THe book was great but the film managed to miss out 2 of the 3 main events
HmmmYebbutt Natasha Kinski does get her kit off which is the main thing
Loved 1984 and Animal Farm (I seem to like the dark totalitarian stuff)...Keep the Aspidistra Flying left me well and truly cold.
Must re-read The Clergymans Daughter...
Anything by Dickens. I seriously tried, I remember picking one up and thinking I must be missing something so I tried. Gave up 1/4 the way through.
Oh yeah...
The Idea of the Holy. Rudolph Otto.
Not being blown away by it nearly cost me my degree.
Dune - Frank Herbert. Didn't get that at all. Gave up.
I read it - or started to read it - because a BF nagged and nagged and went on about how fabulous it was. Not a fan of the film either, so it was a bit of a non-starter. I know it's supposed to be amazing, insightful etc but it wasn't my cup of Darjeeling.
But ... it is SO much more fun to read if you've sat in the desert in the Empty Quarter, and actually seen lizards crossing the sand like his monsters on Arrakis. OK, they were a bit smaller.
Much smaller?
......
Quite tiny, actually; but I know where he got his idea from, and love the way he's played with it.
I always get the feeling that Adams was more interested in the jokes, than in combining them into a narrative. (Although I've enjoyed HHGTTG when I've read them, there are none I feel anxious to go back to).Anything by Douglas Adams aside from the HHGTTG trilogy.
I really like Hardy - that idea of character equalling destiny finds an echo in the noir of James M. Cain et al, other fairly miserable narratives about poor sods trapped by fate that I really enjoy tooHardy is regarded as an author of classics, so while it's all subjective, I am out-numbered by people who read many more novels than me.