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- May 5, 2019
I really like the lofi mixes for readingI should stop using Youtube as background noise.
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I really like the lofi mixes for readingI should stop using Youtube as background noise.
I didn't mean music. I was referring to videos of people talking.I really like the lofi mixes for reading
Incidentally that's named after a song from Blue Öyster Cult's first album. And the book is even dedicated to BOC (and Patti Smith who wrote about a half dozen songs for them all of which are among their best).I finished Transmaniacon by John Shirley.
This anthology, by Bruce Sterling, was a collection of much of the best short stories in what came to be known as cyberpunk, despite nearly all "cyberpunk" authors hating the label.I picked this up because Shirley's "Freezone" was my favorite story out of all in Mirrorshades, a popular anthology.
I was reading a book on investing a few months ago it was like that. I forget the name of it because I think I donated it, but it was mostly the guy talking about how he grew up and that it was good to teach financial literacy. Great, 100% agree, that's why I'm reading this book, and then I noticed that I was about 60 pages from the end and started getting a sneaking suspicion that the book wasn't actually going anywhere.By the time it got interesting it was nearly finished.
At least two of the stories have absolutely nothing to do with cyberpunk, which seemed odd to me. One is about Stonehenge, if I remember correctly.This anthology, by Bruce Sterling, was a collection of much of the best short stories in what came to be known as cyberpunk, despite nearly all "cyberpunk" authors hating the label.
I've got to get to Neuromancer and Schismatrix Plus sometime.This anthology, by Bruce Sterling, was a collection of much of the best short stories in what came to be known as cyberpunk, despite nearly all "cyberpunk" authors hating the label.
I'm glad I gave the former a second try. I tried to read it 20+ years ago and gave it a pass because it was badly translated to my native language. I read the whole thing in English a few years ago and it was a lot of fun. Even a great book can be ruined by a bad translation,I've got to get to Neuromancer and Schismatrix Plus sometime.
As Bruce Sterling goes, one of his underrated classics is Involution Ocean. It's basically a short version of Moby Dick, except the protagonist is seeking an incredibly addictive drug derived from some whale-like creature, leaves to get it for his weird commune of dope fiends, then comes back to find them all dead anyway.I've got to get to Neuromancer and Schismatrix Plus sometime.
Oh cool. I've never gotten too deep into cyberpunk aside from DADOES.As Bruce Sterling goes, one of his underrated classics is Involution Ocean. It's basically a short version of Moby Dick, except the protagonist is seeking an incredibly addictive drug derived from some whale-like creature, leaves to get it for his weird commune of dope fiends, then comes back to find them all dead anyway.
It's incredibly flawed in a number of ways and you could throw a lot of criticisms at it (Sterling wrote it when he was only 21), but it's obviously in the same vein as Ellison's works (and Ellison actually gave it a rave review), and it's well worth a read.
Lovecraft does develop a bit and I'd have to 100% agree that Lovecraft is probably closer to Fantasy at times, especially with his Kadath stuff.Brandy [◉ said:, post: 21301521, member: 184149"]
I have gotten a collection of all works from H.P. Lovecraft and am now reading through in chronological order. Surprised he has written so many short stories and even more surprised how whimsical some of his early stuff tends to be. Yes, there is always a somewhat sombre undertone, but some of the landscapes and places he paints in there are much more fantasy than the occult stuff I usually associate him with. Curious to see if he will drop this over time and home into the more known Lovecraft tropes.
Where should I start with Lovecraft if I've never read him before?Lovecraft does develop a bit and I'd have to 100% agree that Lovecraft is probably closer to Fantasy at times, especially with his Kadath stuff.
Very interesting, I'll be sure to add that to my list once I am done with Lovecraft. Going down chronologically, I am now at Facts Concerning the Late Arthur Jermyn and His Family. So far this has been a ride. All very well written but very different in theme. You have things you expect like Dagon and The Temple (very fun if not propaganda influenced portrayal of Germans of the time). Some more esoteric ones like The White Ship and The Cats of Ulthar, with the latter being quite fantasy. Then you have almost comical recounting like Ibid down to, at least for me, kind of incomprehensible stuff like The Green Meadow. I understand that one was a dream one of his female friends head and he put it into writing, which paints a very different picture of the lonesome, brooding person I always assumed he was. Very fun to explore a writer like this!If you really enjoy Lovecraft, try reading the authors who wrote in the Weird Tales magazine of the 20s-50s. A lot of the regular writers were friends and acquaintances of Lovecraft. Lots of people know about Robert E. Howard and Clark Ashton Smith and August Derleth and etcetera, but you may be surprised to see just how many people Lovecraft wrote letters to and corresponded with. He even mentored Robert Bloch (guy who wrote the novel that Hitchcock's Psycho is based on), Fritz Leiber (of Fafhrd & Grey Mouser fame, a foundational inspiration for DnD), C. L. Moore & Henry Kuttner (a husband and wife duo that did a lot of great work, but sadly still underappreciated), and etc. While there's no notes on them having correspondence with Lovecraft, Ray Bradbury and Tennesee Williams also did quite a bit of their early work for Weird Tales magazine.
All his stuff is public domain, so it shouldn't be too hard to find online and download on a kindle, unless you are like me and prefer to read physical books. The one book I read before wanting to read all of his stuff is The Case of Charles Dexter Ward, which is very much what people associate Lovecraft with these days.Where should I start with Lovecraft if I've never read him before?
Where should I start with Lovecraft if I've never read him before?
Lovecraft was a dorky introvert who deeply cared for his friends. When Robert E. Howard committed suicide, Lovecraft was intensely sad and wrote a nice obituary piece.Brandy [◉ said:, post: 21313230, member: 184149"]
Very interesting, I'll be sure to add that to my list once I am done with Lovecraft. Going down chronologically, I am now at Facts Concerning the Late Arthur Jermyn and His Family. So far this has been a ride. All very well written but very different in theme. You have things you expect like Dagon and The Temple (very fun if not propaganda influenced portrayal of Germans of the time). Some more esoteric ones like The White Ship and The Cats of Ulthar, with the latter being quite fantasy. Then you have almost comical recounting like Ibid down to, at least for me, kind of incomprehensible stuff like The Green Meadow. I understand that one was a dream one of his female friends head and he put it into writing, which paints a very different picture of the lonesome, brooding person I always assumed he was. Very fun to explore a writer like this!