Having had the coffee that's been through the animal's gut I opine that the bat in the machine is worse.
Because that's the last book I read online, and I loved the hell out of it.
Actually, no. I will check it out.
'Objects In Space'
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Having had the coffee that's been through the animal's gut I opine that the bat in the machine is worse.
Because that's the last book I read online, and I loved the hell out of it.
Actually, no. I will check it out.
Cool! She is so much more fun than Florence Nightingale.The scene when she arrives at her brother's hotel just slayed me. Also the bit when she's being toasted by the Americans in spite of being "yeller". Her response is fabulous.
I did always think smugly of her when taught about Ms. Nightingale, despite my being considerably less humanitarian than either of them.
Ha! [link]
I tend to agree with that, for the most part (Sarah Monette, I'm looking at you), although the made-up words never tripped me up with Harry Potter. I wonder why.
Hee.
Maybe because quite often they were specific "spell words" which you wouldn't want to use in regular conversation? Or they were slang?
Maybe because quite often they were specific "spell words" which you wouldn't want to use in regular conversation? Or they were slang?
I just think she was really good at making it clear through context what the made-up words meant. Plus, the reader identifies with Harry's POV, and since all the wizard terminology is foreign to him as well (at least in book 1), we learn it along with him.
Ha.
I have a fairly high tolerance for made up tech jargon, but agree that most authors don't know how to do it well, and in most non-Tolkien fantasy it drives me batty. [eta: Maybe it's because the real tech world is so full of idiotic Web 2.0 jargon that it stands to reason the future would be even worse?]
In general, I think made-up words work best when they're derived from real ones so your brain doesn't have to do a lot of work translating them every time they pop up. (I'm thinking of the Vorkosiganverse's comconscoles, which stand in for phones and computers - you don't need an appendix to translate that into modern Earth English.)
Also, I need to pick up Anathem.
I tend to agree with that, for the most part (Sarah Monette, I'm looking at you)
That's really interesting, because I find Sarah Monette to be exceptionally good at choosing placenames and using new words so that they seem natural and enrich the background of the story.
I'm thinking of the Vorkosiganverse's comconscoles, which stand in for phones and computers - you don't need an appendix to translate that into modern Earth English
Blackberry? Iphone?