This week, Drizzt Do’Urden again. Frankly, it’s fertile ground.
Drizzt: This week, whilst roaming in the city with my good friend Bruenor Battlehammer (he is a dwarven king, as those I speak to seem to somehow intuit when I ...
This week, Drizzt Do’Urden again. Frankly, it’s fertile ground.
Drizzt: This week, whilst roaming in the city with my good friend Bruenor Battlehammer (he is a dwarven king, as those I speak to seem to somehow intuit when I have but mentioned his name… doubtless it is his well-justified fame) we came upon a number of suspicious-looking characters lurking in the shadows beside by a tanner’s shop. This was most suspicious, as the odor emanating from the establishment was such that it triggered a flashback to my woeful days in Menzoberranzan, ere my liberation to the sweetness and friendship of my surface life, tainted though it ever is and shall be by my drow features. Oh, can one elf alone redeem the reputation of his race? Would such redemption, even sweet, be of any true value in the passage of time, as the legacy of evil of my kindred only perpetuates further atrocity against which I must strive? What was I talking about? Oh, yes. Suspicious fellows. Bruenor, seeing us outnumbered, immediately inquired as to the whereabouts of that noble Guenhwyvar who has been my faithful companion these many years. “Fear not, mighty Bruenor,” I replied. “Guenhywvar’s eyes are upon us, even if ours cannot return their protective gaze!” (note: R.A. Salvatore actually wrote this line). Shortly following my statement, I was somehow mistaken for a flamboyant thespian and bundled away to a community theater and a dismal production of that well-known play King Learzinozatazzitazz’kariconibzzzzz. Why do these things keep happening to me?
Bill: This week I finished Jay Lake‘s GREEN trilogy by reading Endurance and Kalimpura. Both novels, and the trilogy as a whole, disappointed, unfortunately. I also read Robert J. Sawyer‘s Red Planet Blues, also disappointing. Luckily, the week ended on a good note via Ian McEwan‘s latest, Sweet Tooth, which was enjoyable all the way through and ended smashingly. Here’s hoping the ratio tips in the other direction next week. On a non-literary note, but just because it’s still in the arts and I’m so excited about it, I’m looking forward to today’s viewing of Terence Malick’s latest film, To the Wonder.
Brad: This week I started PKD‘s Valis, which is very funny and perhaps his best work stylistically. I continue to dip into short stories and essays by Harlan Ellison. I am also enjoying my first novel by Mike Carey, The Devil You Know. Carey is primarily a comic book writer and has written Hellblazer as well as the long-running Lucifer in its entirety. Lucifer is a spin-off of Sandman, and it often reaches the same greatness in both artwork and writing. The Devil You Know fits in the same category as the Harry Dresden novels from what I can tell. I am also continuing to enjoy Of Human Bondage by Maugham using Amazon’s Immersion Reading technology. On Audiobook, I’m rereading Gaiman‘s The Graveyard Book with my daughter and Neverwhere by myself. I’ve also started listening to Bradbury‘s The Golden Apples of the Sun. In nonfiction, I’ve been reading In Praise of Slowness and two excellent works on education by Ken Bain: What the Best College Students Do and What the Best College Teachers Do. I highly recommend the first one which is NOT a self-help book. It is a book about how all of us who love to learn approach new knowledge. It’s about ways of thinking and not about how to take tests well or make good grades. It is about intrinsic rather than extrinsic motivation (like grades and money). I’ve also been reading essays on PKD in the highly recommended Philip K. Dick and Philosophy from the incredible series Pop Culture and Philosophy. In the world of comics, I’m reading Ultra: Seven Days by the Luna Brothers. That’s about it. No, I think there’s a crime novel I started, too. Anyway, I obviously like starting books more than I lik