Active Users:244 Time:20/05/2024 11:06:23 PM
Re: Now that's a reply - Edit 1

Before modification by DomA at 18/06/2010 09:06:57 PM

Scandinavian crime fiction? Really?


Well, I'm Canadian so the social background is only midly exotic, and I can relate to the rest of the cultural elements.

The writers in translation are the best ones. I can't think of a really bad scandinavian crime novel I've picked in Série Noire.

Not that most of these are "great novels" per say, but you get what expect.

Ah, but the good bit about reading crap is that you can then bitch and moan about this horribly bad book you came across, which had promised so much with its wonderful title/cover. Makes for conversation topics


The one problem with this is that I don't find thatt much fun in bitching and moaning about what I don't like! There's too much I like/will like out there for me to waste too much time on what I decided is crap/not for me.

Only the first time?


No, not really. I love WOT, but I see Jordan as the modern Fantasy version of writers like Dumas and Natoli, and I have a fondness for the "feuilleton" genre.

That said, I never really warmed up much to the first three WOT books.

And yes, the WoT cover art really is spectacularly bad. It is a wonder anyone actually read the books.


It's bit snob/rude of me, but for 10 years this was for me the crap the receptionist at the office read on her breaks.

I still don't like so much bringing US fantasy books in public places. Well, anonymous public places I don't care, but it's not the sort of books I would leave on my desk when I worked in a studio. The jokes about "the crap" I'm reading gets old really quick. Mind you, with many of the American trends in book packaging being what they are, in the milieu I work in you can get that sort of comments for reading pretty much any US-made book, Fantasy ones are just worse as they look like immature teenage boy stuff. Let's just say they don't exactly leave that good an impression in a milieu where your general culture (and bullshitting) comes into play a lot (eg: when you need to sell a concept to a fussy artsy director. If he saw the Lord of Chaos PB on your back two minutes ago, chances are you're as screwed as if you went on raving about Stephanie Meyer or how great an actress J. Lo is).

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