I'm ok. Why were you laid off? And I need to read more books.
Catch up, again
On 07/03/2014 at 01:57 PM by rejo1479 See More From This User » |
I have been gone WAAAAAAYYYYYYYYYYYY too long. I actually feel pretty bad about that, but work kept me away from gaming and most of life for a while. But I've been laid off, so now I have a bit of time to devote to writing and gaming and writing about gaming and maybe some gaming about writing (anyone know any writing games? Call of Duty: Elements of Style).
So what HAVE I done?
I finished the main campaign of Borderlands 2 and am now working on the DLC with a friend. I'll definitely write a way too late review of this game and why I'm excited for The Pre-Sequel.
I finished Infamous: Second Son, which also deserves a review, though not as late as Borderlands'.
I've read The Inhuman Condition by Clive Barker, who I binged on back in high school. Going back and reading this early short story collection was nice. He always manages to do some very interesting fantasy/horror mix in his work.
I also managed to finish From A Buick 8 by Stephen King. Like Barker, I read tons of King in high school, but let it aside afterwards. So most of his work from about 98 and after are unknown to me (aside from the Dark Tower novels, those were always to interesting to forget about). I DEVOURED this book. Some might complain that it felt like a bloated short story--and I can understand that--but I loved how while it had it's strange elements, they were not the focus of the narrative. It was a story about a group of older folk helping a kid come to terms with the loss of a father. It also was a brilliant little study on how some people would react to intrusions to reality that can't be explained.
I normally dislike film adaptations of King's work, but I feel that if done well, From A Buick 8 could be a solid little movie. It could fall in line with great King horror adaptations like 1408 and The Mist. (I said horror to differentiate it from Stand By Me and The Shawshank Redemption.)
I also read Searoad by Ursula K Le Guin. She's been one of my favorite authors for a very long time, despite my odd reluctance to read anything from her that I didn't find at my local second-hand bookstore. I've managed to find quite of few of her books though, so I feel comfortable saying she's a fave author.
She's known for working in the SF/fantasy genre, always with a focus of sociological issues, from gender equality to the impact of governments on it's citizens. However, Searoad is different. It's a short story collection set in a small Washington State town.
There was nothing fantastical about this book. It was just snippets of people's lives. Sometimes when something important was happening, sometimes not. All of them were beautiful. Seriously. I nearly cried while reading some of these. Then I got angry because she'll never get the recognition she deserves as a high-caliber writer due to her focus on genre fiction. I don't know if I should be happy or sad that Oprah never lauded Le Guin on her contemptible book club.
Phew! So how y'all doing?
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