Connie, religion's in here too, just not as central. The interesting-to-me part is that he seems happy and comfortable with Scientologists, but really viciously down on Christians.
wasn't he suffering mini-strokes at the time he wrote this?
this would explain so much about the plot, structure, and pacing.
Anyone looking for free nonfiction to read should check this out. Long pieces by Susan Orlean and Tom Wolfe.
Chris Ware's
Building Stories
arrived in the mail on Saturday. So amazing. Anyone else looked at it?
Interview with Steven Brust - [link] (xpost with gww)
An Abundance of Katherines and Will Grayson, Will Grayson, both by John Green. Amazing.
I don't know whether you saw that I loved The Fault in Our Stars and liked Looking for Alaska. I just started
An Abundance of Katherines,
and I love the narrative voice. I have no idea what to expect, but I think I'll like it more than
Looking for Alaska.
Has anybody read YA author C.J. Omololu?
She's the parent of one of the kids on Emmett's tournament team, and they hosted our season ending party.
Nice quote for a segue: "I almost quit writing my first book when John Green's Looking for Alaska came out because the writing was so good, I figured why bother."
I haven't read
The Fault in our Stars
yet - it's not at the Nashville Public Library in eBook form, so it's getting delayed.
Friday
is basically awful, but does indeed have some cool ideas in it. I loved the bit where she researches the Shipstone corporation - it really piqued my interest in the insanity that already IS multinational conglomerate corporations. I still enjoy wasting time by reading about all of the brands/companies owned by Proctor and Gamble or Pepsico or whatever.
I also just like the idea of Shipstones. Sure would be a nice way to solve every energy crisis.
Robert Heinlein was very ill in the '70s and had a series of TIAs starting in 1978. I charitably believe that that's why late Heinlein sucks and focuses on the least attractive of his vices.
I can never condemn the man overall, because his inventiveness is unparalleled and his early work changed my life. I've reread the juveniles many times, except for Podkayne of Mars, which is not a novel to be tossed aside lightly. It should be thrown with great force.
Okay. . . Barbara Van Tuyl of the "Bonnie" series of horse books repinned one of my pins on Pinterest!!!