Saturday, August 29, 2020
Far Cry 4
Thursday, August 27, 2020
Dark Lover
My local library's fantasy/scifi section has an awful many books from someone going by the name of J.R. Ward. I was curious since I had never heard of the author before. A quick google search revealed it to be one of Jessica Bird Blakemore's pen names. Under her maiden name, Jessica Bird, she writes contemporary romance novels and as J.R. Ward too -- just with a paranormal twist. And more specifically: vampires.
Saturday, August 22, 2020
Altered Carbon
Richard Morgan's cyberpunk novel, Altered Carbon, turned out to be about as great as its Netflix adaptation. Or at least the first season of the show was much to my liking: I have not seen the second yet. In my opinion the show is one of the better ones Netflix has produced. I do wonder though how the second season is: the novel and its sequels are somewhat challenging to adapt for television because the characters tend to switch bodies. Claiming two people are the same person is difficult to believe when you don't have access to their thoughts like you do in a book. How well does the continuity work when the main character is played by a completely different actor.
Friday, August 14, 2020
The Lost Fleet
The Lost Fleet is a military science fiction novel series written by John G. Hemry under the pen name Jack Campbell. This one is bit of an unusual book post on the blog as I read the whole series, all six volumes of it, before having a chance to write anything about it. The novels were quick and easy reads: they're your standard 300-page books (in English; slightly more in Finnish) and there's only one viewpoint, that of Captain John "Black Jack" Geary's.
Tuesday, August 11, 2020
The Night Watch
The back cover of The Night Watch (Ночной Дозор) claimed the book, and the series it's a part of, are more popular in Russia than The Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter. That might very well be the case -- hell if I know. The Harry Potter series is a good comparison though. Similarly to it, The Night Watch is low/urban fantasy (not to be mistaken with low and high magic) and the relationship characters have with magic and supernatural is the same way sort of relaxed: fear is not the first reaction to magic and even seemingly grievous injuries can be healed and undone.
Sunday, August 9, 2020
The Book Was Better -- Or Was It?
Reading a novel before watching its TV/film adaption(s) is the correct order of doing things. Going the other way around I always find it challenging to picture my own visuals of a book's world and characters: seeing first someone else's vision of it and then replacing it is difficult. It's like most of the author's work had already been done and experiencing the story again via reading feels otiose. Comparing my own, already existing mental images to an adaption is more worthwhile.