It looks like I've got about a couple hours left, so I think I'll wait a week and save this whole last stretch for the drive from Chattanooga to Nashville (my rental car better have auxiliary input) rather than break it up over a week.
Ugh
IT WAS MADDIE'S IDEA TO SEND IN THE REPORTER. MADDIE IS FUCKING SLEEPING IN THE ROOM OF JULIE'S TORTURER. GODFUCKINGDAMMIT.
Cool. We can discuss it at dinner.
Anyone else read "The Flamethrowers"?(especially if you can tell me why it got such orgasmic reviews. Although it is helping its cause that it smells marginally less of hippie perfume.) Don't get me wrong--I like it fine, and have moderate curiosity about what happens to our narrator, but I have no desire to stop what I'm doing and rewrite it like Rachel Kushner would or anything...is this another thing I missed because I went to a state university?
I started the last Skulduggery Pleasant book finally. Now that I'm several chapters in to it, the first chapter confuses the shit out of me. (Which I'm aware it's meant to do, and I have no doubt it will all make sense sooner or later, but it's still bugging me.) (I'm also perplexed by
the reflection
ignoring the
memory stick that was delivered to the Edgleys' house.
I have a theory about that, but I'll just put a pin in my theory for now.)
I haven't put the book in the freezer. YET.
I just finished it. I read the whole series in about a month (well, the last 6 - I read the first three from my library a while ago) and it is amazing. And cost me a pretty penny in Canadian dollars.
Regarding the stick, my thought when reading that was that it just didn't occur to her it might have something to do with her. Nobody in the magical world works through USB sticks so she probably assumed it doesn't have anything to do with her secrets.
It is a satisfying conclusion, and will probably not require freezering, though there is plenty of darkness. The darkness started several books ago, though, so if you could handle them you should be able to handle this one. And, yeah, first chapter is confusing and will be so for a long while.
I keep thinking: this series has a lot in common with Harry Potter in some ways; magic, humorous dialog, lots of worldwide deadly threats that only seem to take place in the one, fairly small, country that happens to be the major setting. But this series is better in two distinct ways: first, it actually acknowledges the existence of other countries, makes them integral to the plot, and does a pretty good job of explaining why we don't hear much from them in many of the stories. And second,
OH MY GOD IT REALLY FEELS LIKE WAR.
Harry Potter got a lot darker as the series progressed, but J.K. Rowling never really wrote about
war.
She wrote about some battles, but was never able to take it to the large scale (A.J. Hall did it better in her fic). But, God, Skulduggery Pleasant pulls it off over and over again. It's like Harry Potter stakes with Hunger Games realistic, painful, believability and descriptive violence.
It is so, so good. But I kind of get why it hasn't been published in the US all the way through. I cringed a lot.
I'm pretty far in to it now, and I think it is Minear-level shit to
remove Tanith's Remnant NOW
Jesus Christ. Also, v. sad about
Gordon, even if he was Echo!Gordon, because he was, for all intents and purposes, Real!Gordon. He said as much. I *almost* froze it when I thought that
Darquesse was killing Tanith, even if it was Remnant!Tanith.
(And I guess
Darquesse WAS killing Tanith, but then she healed her, too.)
I thought, when the
shunting
was introduced in Kingdom of the Wicked, that it was distracting and irrelevant. NOPE. (I mean, it paid off in Last Stand of Dead Men, with the
new Roarhaven,
but I'm glad to see it's still in play.)
I'd guess I have maybe 1/4 left to go.
Valkyrie just got her tattoo,
and
Alice has been kidnapped
(WHAT THE FUCK DEREK LANDY), and Skulduggery just started his
trials in the netherworlds dealie.
I'm reading pretty fast, because I just want to KNOW.
Gordon
was one of the times I had to just walk away from the book for a little while. Not quite needing the freezer, but close.
So much about
Tanith
in this one broke my heart.
Geez, more like Skulduggery Unpleasant, am I right.
Now I'm really interested in reading them. How many are there? Are they long?
There are 9, and they get longer through the series, the way the Harry Potter books did.
I'm rereading Stephen King's Firestarter, which I read once before about 31 years ago. (Damn, I'm getting old.) I lost my copy so I got the kindle version to read on my iPad. I've noticed some typos that I'm assuming were a result of OCR errors--'car' becomes 'can', no space between an italicized word and the following word--stuff like that.
I've seen other Kindleized old books with many more problems, but for some reason on Firestarter it annoys me more--it's a Stephen King book! From a major publisher!
OK, it's not a big deal, but is this common in digitized old books? Are they skimping on proofreading? Or would it just take took much proofreading to catch all these errors?