10 points right thereawmperry said:Most over-hyped? Well, I'll get slaughtered for saying it, but I'd have to say J K Rowling.
10 points right thereawmperry said:Most over-hyped? Well, I'll get slaughtered for saying it, but I'd have to say J K Rowling.
Unfortunately not, I'd suggest stealthily stuffing it down their throat so they can enjoy reading as well. And not just Harry Potter and the Da Vinci Code crossovers.Anarchemitis said:[humor]So we can all agree that reading is a good thing as long as we hide it from the peasant obsessive gamers, lest they gain literacy?[/humor]
And that's why he's still a coachBuckminsterF said:One of the coaches saw me reading and said that if I read too much my head would explode, he also suggested not eating to lose weight.
and not a good one if he says stuff like thatThe_root_of_all_evil said:And that's why he's still a coachBuckminsterF said:One of the coaches saw me reading and said that if I read too much my head would explode, he also suggested not eating to lose weight.![]()
I was raised on books - both my parents are very literate, my mother has an English Language degree, so we were read to and encouraged to read. It's a running joke in the family that if I can't get my hands on a book, I'll read the back of the cornflakes packet. When I was about fourteen, our school decided they should encourage reading too, so the teacher asked us all to bring in a book for twenty minutes' supervised private reading a day. One of the boys in my class said he didn't have any books in his house. My jaw dropped. Of course, his chavvy mates thought it was brilliant.Darth Mobius said:No, we can flaunt it, and they will still fail to gain literacy, because "BOOKZ R FER FAGZ!!!1!!"Anarchemitis said:[humor]So we can all agree that reading is a good thing as long as we hide it from the peasant obsessive gamers, lest they gain literacy?[/humor]
*Shudder* I am a book worm, but I still enjoy real life. I have a girlfriend, an ex-wife, and a daughter to prove that... As well as a job, and go to college.
Yes! It's good to know I'm not the only one who thinks that.awmperry said:Most over-hyped? Well, I'll get slaughtered for saying it, but I'd have to say J K Rowling.
you should see our friends who own a used bookstore, they have walls made of books. the scary thing is he knows where they all all, in both the house and the store, well mostly author but still it's kinda freaky to seeSib said:My house is beginning to look like a library, seriously in every single room there's a minimum of one bookcase and in one room we have these 2 gigantic oak ones that take up half the wall heheh.
EDIT: also beasty computer set up you got there![]()
I concur, she's somewhat fickle when it comes to her use of words, and in Deathly Hallows (arguably her worst-written book) she simply assumes that everyone is willing to put up with her lack of structure and patience (really, about a million things happen per chapter) in exchange for explanation of (almost) decades-old plot points. She's right, of course, but still displays outstanding arrogance in front of her fellow authors with such an obvious attitude.awmperry said:Most over-hyped? Well, I'll get slaughtered for saying it, but I'd have to say J K Rowling. She's a superlative storyteller (when she can keep track of what she's said and when, and when she's not introducing new plot elements four minutes from the end when poor old Chekov's had his shotgun lying about since book two) but she really isn't a particularly good writer.
Managed to get halfway through Anna Karenina; that thing really is a bloody novel of attrition. Still, I found it quite a good read, although the simple size of thing astounded me and thus couldn't bare another 1000+ pages to trawl through in order to reach the conclusion. It has far better and more interesting characters than War and Peace, I think. The likes of Konstantin Levin who is somewhat comedic in his courting ways, Oblonsky and his irrational affairs and Vronsky the reluctant war hero are far deeper than some of the stock tosh which War and Peace is widely criticised to contain.Sib said:Just out of curiosity, has anyone EVER actually finished "War and Peace"?
I had a bash at reading it and got a few chapters done, but god it's mind numbing.
yeah i'm sure he'd be like that but the boss put her foot down and said get some books out of here so he had to cut back on themj-e-f-f-e-r-s said:There was a elderly chap I knew who had, at his last count, ten thousand books in his home. Seriously, you sent into his house and every wall was stacked from floor to ceiling.
Quite coincidentally, he's one of the cleverest guys I've ever met.
the think about jk rowling is she's a CHILD'S author, not an adult author. so she's not going to be a great author compared to someone like tolkien or gaiman and such. so try comparing her to kids authors instead of ones that write books for adults.Fondant said:I never saw why so many people objected to Rowling's writing.... to me it often seems to be a habit amongst intellectuals to immediately critique anything that acheives popularity.... though again, her actual writing often leaves a great deal to be desired.