HugoNebula
HugoNebula t1_jdzeyvu wrote
Reply to Generally, drug addicts are usually seen as bad. My question is, are book addicts usually seen as good? by Delicious_Maize9656
Not all addictions are equal, or even comparable.
HugoNebula t1_jddsdbl wrote
Both, at the time, excellent and interesting authors of the genre, King's easy-going populism and Straub's literary mastery. Unfortunately, The Talisman exhibits neither of these qualities, remaining resolutely humdrum and bloated, and wholly unremarkable. Black House is, if anything, even worse.
HugoNebula t1_jcok1ms wrote
Reply to comment by TinyAd280 in What was one book you wanted to throw across the room- and why? by UnfallenAdventure
King doesn't remember writing the book these days (that may be his age as much as anything), but he recalled it well enough in interviews at the time, just after Cujo was published. Regarding that scene specifically, he relates writing it and shocking himself (King, as you may know, doesn't write detailed outlines for he books, just writes it as he goes) and just sitting there, thinking it over. Eventually, he decided to carry on and see where that plot point took him.
I think it makes the book—the entire thing seems to be a critique of the destruction of the nuclear family and a treatise on karma.
HugoNebula t1_ja7phvk wrote
Reply to comment by loneacer in Just finished Fairy Tale by Stephen King - And i have a complete opposite opinion than the majority by Sinsai33
I thoroughly enjoyed 11/22/63 (more for the unexpected love story than anything else), and thought Finders Keepers was by some margin the best of the Hodges books, and the last truly decent book he published—but I consider them outliers in his recent work.
HugoNebula t1_ja7nfuy wrote
Reply to Just finished Fairy Tale by Stephen King - And i have a complete opposite opinion than the majority by Sinsai33
>My first was the shining, which i would rate a 8/10. So maybe, King is just not my style and i was lucky with the shining.
I think you could pick any of King's first half-dozen or so books (and all of the initial Richard Bachman novels) and have a pretty good time, rewarding your time and interest. After that, maybe another half-dozen equally strong reads, as long as you avoided the novels veering into fantasy (and I would include the Dark Tower series in this).
Fairy Tale comes in the twilight of a very long career, when most folk would just retire. King can't not write, so he'll continue to be published, but he's written very little of real worth—certainly compared to his heyday—for almost two decades now.
HugoNebula t1_ja2nm7t wrote
Reply to Asimov's Foundation Is Bad Literature by Kryptin
SF is the literature of ideas, which may be the issue you have with Foundation.
HugoNebula t1_ja2lmt1 wrote
Reply to comment by HugoNebula in How triggering is ‘The Road’? by The_Upbeat_Jumper
Case in point...
HugoNebula t1_j9zb0p6 wrote
Reply to How triggering is ‘The Road’? by The_Upbeat_Jumper
Curious how it is that almost every downvoted comment here also contains criticism of—or indifference to—McCarthy's book. Astounding how our supposed literati of intellectual giants seem utterly incapable of engaging in good faith debate or unwilling to defend a criticised work in favour of hit-and-run cowardice.
HugoNebula t1_j9yc59n wrote
Reply to comment by Zombiejesus307 in How triggering is ‘The Road’? by The_Upbeat_Jumper
You sound triggered.
HugoNebula t1_j9xxvm6 wrote
Other than his New England background, Lovecraft was probably most influenced to this end by the supernatural novels and stories of William Hope Hodgson, many of them maritime in theme and setting.
HugoNebula t1_j9xxg1i wrote
Reply to How triggering is ‘The Road’? by The_Upbeat_Jumper
The Road is quite beautifully written, and about as bleak as you could imagine, but like most 'literary' works dipping their toes into genre, it's a tired and unambitious retread of far lesser known, generally lesser-regarded, but ultimately more satisfying and original works: you could look to Earth Abides, by George R Stewart; A Canticle For Leibowitz, by Walter M Miller Jr; I Am Legend, by Richard Matheson; The Postman, by David Brin; or much of Ballard's early work—The Drowned World, The Drought, The Crystal World.
If you do fancy reading outside of the genre specific, and into literary writers making a better fist of venturing into the post-apocalyptic, you could do worse than Russell Hoban's Riddley Walker, Emily St John Mandel's Station Eleven, PD James' The Children of Men, or Nevil Shute's On The Beach.
HugoNebula t1_j95c1y3 wrote
Reply to comment by Adocron in Why Stephen King wrote under the pseudonym Richard Bachman? by Beneficial_Daikon886
I don't know, but I wonder if reading the linked article would answer your questions?
HugoNebula t1_j95c06w wrote
Reply to comment by MissAnthropoid in Why Stephen King wrote under the pseudonym Richard Bachman? by Beneficial_Daikon886
No, he didn't write that. He wanted to be known for his writing, not his name, but he never denigrated the works he published under the Bachman name.
HugoNebula t1_j90rzje wrote
Reply to comment by HugoNebula in Why Stephen King wrote under the pseudonym Richard Bachman? by Beneficial_Daikon886
Downvoting doesn't make you any less wrong.
HugoNebula t1_j8xkqsx wrote
Reply to comment by AlanMorlock in Why Stephen King wrote under the pseudonym Richard Bachman? by Beneficial_Daikon886
All of the original four Bachman books were written before King was even published, much less got into coke.
HugoNebula t1_j6numtv wrote
Reply to comment by owensum in Does anyone know when (or if) Harlan Ellison's I Have No Mouth & I Must Scream will be in print again? by No-Im-The-Walrus
I think many things Harlan Ellison did in his lifetime made Harlan Ellison's life harder, so why should this be any different?
HugoNebula t1_j6mf9no wrote
Reply to Does anyone know when (or if) Harlan Ellison's I Have No Mouth & I Must Scream will be in print again? by No-Im-The-Walrus
The last I heard, JM (Babylon 5) Straczynski, the executor of Ellison's estate, had pledged to preserve Ellison's house and make all of his work available in new editions. Clearly it's taking some time, and existing contracts and licenses may have lapsed.
HugoNebula t1_j6mf14z wrote
Reply to comment by Matherno in I don't understand why publishers tend to release larger versions of books first. by Matherno
Again, it's a scale for maximising profit. As mentioned elsewhere, all of these formats cost relatively the same amount to print and bind, so the earlier, more expensive formats make more money for the publisher, and offer the consumer a choice, both in format and early access.
Usually, the hardback and the larger paperback are released together, the paperback being slightly cheaper. Then the B-format paperback comes some time after that. There used to be an A-format, or 'mass market' paperback that was the cheapest of all, but those have fallen out of fashion.
HugoNebula t1_j6j3fh2 wrote
Reply to comment by General-Skin6201 in Just me, or was IT really too long? by KnightOfPanda
In the grand scheme of things, IT is one of King's earlier works.
HugoNebula t1_j6j33a7 wrote
Reply to I don't understand why publishers tend to release larger versions of books first. by Matherno
> If anything it just reduces potential profit on release for the new books.
Literally the opposite—publishers make more money off the readers who will pay more to have a book straight away, or prefer the quality of a hardback. It divides the audience for a book into tiered payments, and makes more money off those happy to pay more.
HugoNebula t1_j4zlxqo wrote
I ignore the preface, foreword, or introduction these days, saving it until I've read the book, and treating it as an afterword—which, it seems to me, most are intended as by the author, given how spoilery they can be, and it's the publisher who messes up by publishing them at the front of the book.
HugoNebula t1_j29lhi6 wrote
It's not supposed to be funny, it's supposed to be ironic and satirical.
HugoNebula t1_j1pl2sk wrote
Reply to comment by That-Requirement-285 in I just read Stephen King's "Carrie". I have a Doubt by Varun_shiroyasha
King didn't use cocaine until the writing of The Stand, and had been writing short fiction for fourteen years by the time Carrie was published, seven or eight of them professionally published.
HugoNebula t1_ixyhr84 wrote
Reply to I just finished reading The Running Man by Stephen King. It was a fantastic book, and I’m unsure why others disagree. by ALittleInternet
I've not seen The Running Man getting worse reviews than any other of the Bachman books, or King's books in general. 3.89 on Goodreads, 4.5/5 on Amazon—where are seeing poor reviews?
HugoNebula t1_je96vfw wrote
Reply to Need help to add number of pages in a book by Jesper_Slade
For reasons of verification, this sort of request is best made through the Goodreads Librarians Group here.