Speaking of Bruce Campbell, I just started watching Season 3 of Ash vs. Evil Dead.
I read a fair amount of non-fiction for pleasure, most recently John Cleese's memoir, So, Anyway....
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Celedam wrote:Zunu wrote:Nayoko-Kihara wrote:Celedam wrote:Anyhow, next up for me is Sword Art Online, before it too expires off of Netflix.
I'm interested in what you end up thinking of SAO. It's one of the shows that I've been teetering back and forth on watching for a while now.
I watched SAO, and I guess it succeeded in being a Big Deal, like D&D meets Ready Player One, but at the same time it felt like the rump to a merchandizing tie-in, which I don't know is even true, but that's how it felt.
Yeah, I'm only a few episodes into it, but I'm getting the same feeling.
Celedam wrote:Zunu wrote:These days I mostly read either non-fiction if I want to think […]
Augh, I get enough of that already, between work and current events.
Celedam wrote:Zunu wrote:Celedam wrote:[O]ffline I'm currently reading The Player of Games, the second book in Iain M. Banks' Culture series, so my space opera needs are already covered.
I just read Consider Phlebas (first book) a few months back. It was well written I guess, but I still considered it a little bit of a slog, probably in the first instance because like a lot of people it's become hard for me to read full books any more. But also because, while I'm sure it was a rollicking space adventure in its time, with super-advanced tech and singularity-level AI that still plays as hard science, those themes been reused/ripped-off so many times in the years since then that it (unfairly) seems ho-hum in 2019. And also because, while I can appreciate the intellectual accomplishment of getting the details of things like orbital mechanics, microgravity, etc precisely right, in actuality I'm not checking the math, and just care that they sound kind of convincing, so I find myself kind of guiltily speeding over those passages instead of savoring them with any of the degree of attention the author put into them. And finallySpoiler: show
People I trust have said that Consider Phlebas is one of the worst books in the Culture series, and that later books are better. People have also said Consider Phlebas was meant to be difficult to get through, as hinted at by the title which is a reference to T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land. Nevertheless, the whirlwind-tour-through-the-galaxy format serves as a good introduction to the Culture.
It's too early for me to make a judgement about The Player of Games.
Zunu wrote:I've read a chapter or so and still have it nominally on my to-read list so I won't check out your spoiler […]
Zunu wrote:On a lighter note, I enjoyed Amazon Prime"s Good Omens miniseries. It was fairly faithful to the source material and the two actors who played Aziraphale and Crowley (Michael Sheen and David Tennant) were pitch perfect.
Zunu wrote:The protagonist changes as a person in ways that seem earned. Anime used to excel at that, now not so much. Attack on Titan was like that to me for a while.
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