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  1. #41
    Originally posted by Discount Whore 2.0 You obviously havent listened to harris enough if you think he believes the koran is 'war oriented' or perhaps you are being defensive of your culture. But I never got that impression.

    I invite you to source the koran here, as im sure you know the koran better than anyone else on this site.

    See: Lando's reply
  2. #42
    Lanny Bird of Courage
    Originally posted by -SpectraL For sure. Best book I've ever read, and I've read thousands.

    Thousands of books and Stephen King penned the best of them?
  3. #43
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Originally posted by Lanny Thousands of books and Stephen King penned the best of them?

    I've read hundreds of authors over 50 years, and I think Stephen King is the greatest writer of all of them.
  4. #44
    Lanny Bird of Courage
    Originally posted by -SpectraL I've read hundreds of authors over 50 years, and I think Stephen King is the greatest writer of all of them.

    Can you offer us a little literary analysis of King? What makes him the best? What makes him better than something like, let's say, Hemingway?
  5. #45
    mmQ Lisa Turtle
    I've always liked Stephen myself, perhaps for what I feel is a tremendous amount of detail that as reading, doesn't feel tremendous or unnecessary.
  6. #46
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Originally posted by Lanny Can you offer us a little literary analysis of King? What makes him the best? What makes him better than something like, let's say, Hemingway?

    It's really tough to pin down, because it's so complex, but in a nutshell, he has a way of not only bringing the characters to life in crystal clarity, he does so in a modern way. The way he links you to the characters is to push the leading edge of relevance between you and the people in his stories, within a framework of modern variables. Then he contrasts and intertwines that modern relevance with the ancient, the old, the past, the forgotten, which ends up presenting this black and white thing he then adds the color to. But all that is only a small part of it. He really does have a remarkable approach in the way he sets up his plots and worlds of entirely believable personalities.
  7. #47
    mashlehash victim of incest [my perspicuously dependant flavourlessness]
    The Transall Saga.

    Read half of it in a night.
  8. #48
    Obbe Alan What? [annoy my right-angled speediness]
    I read a lot of Kings older stuff that my parents had laying around while growing up. I always found it entertain and creepy. You ever read his stuff, Lanny?

    Anyone else excited to see the new It movie?

  9. #49
    mashlehash victim of incest [my perspicuously dependant flavourlessness]
    Originally posted by Open Your Mind Anyone else excited to see the new It movie?


    I'll probably wait for it to come out onto Netflix, and if it doesn't, I'll buy it.
  10. #50
    mmQ Lisa Turtle
    THe new IT is going to be a piece of shIT, as much as I try to convince myself otherwise.
  11. #51
    Lanny Bird of Courage
    Originally posted by Open Your Mind I read a lot of Kings older stuff that my parents had laying around while growing up. I always found it entertain and creepy. You ever read his stuff, Lanny?

    Similar situation, my dad was very into his books, I read a few. Pet Sematary, Cujo, and Talisman I think. Oh, and the one about aliens. I enjoyed them but wasn't in love. Reminded me a lot of the Eragon series, a really indulgent style kind of lacking a deeper point. Fun to read but not really really having any depth. I get the americana vibe and how his characters are supposed to be deeply relatable to middle and lower class Americans, and I don't have a problem with that either, Steinbeck is one of my favorite authors. I just felt like building up a relatable character to march them through a very literal horror/fantasy sequence didn't give a lot to really chew on.
  12. #52
    mashlehash victim of incest [my perspicuously dependant flavourlessness]
    I thought it was already out in theatres.
  13. #53
    Lanny Bird of Courage
    Oh, I liked Sun Dog though. That whole collection it was part of. Somehow King's more enjoyable to me in the short story form.
  14. #54
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    The Dark Tower movie is coming out soon.

  15. #55
    mashlehash victim of incest [my perspicuously dependant flavourlessness]
    Originally posted by -SpectraL The Dark Tower movie is coming out soon.


    I would watch in theaters if autism wasn't such a scare.
  16. #56
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Another pretty epic story is, The Keep [F. Paul Wilson/1981]. During WW2, the Germans setup headquarters in an ancient castle keep, unaware that an evil force already resides within. It has some damned scary parts in it.
  17. #57
    mashlehash victim of incest [my perspicuously dependant flavourlessness]
    Originally posted by -SpectraL Another pretty epic story is, The Keep [F. Paul Wilson/1981]. During WW2, the Germans setup headquarters in an ancient castle keep, unaware that an evil force already resides within. It has some damned scary parts in it.

    Is it on Netflix?
  18. #58
    -SpectraL coward [the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
    Originally posted by mashlehash Is it on Netflix?

    I think they did make it into a movie at some point, but the book will be 10X better than the movie.
  19. #59
    Originally posted by -SpectraL I've read hundreds of authors over 50 years, and I think Stephen King is the greatest writer of all of them.

    It was Peter Straub's influence that made the Talisman so great.
  20. #60
    Lanny Bird of Courage
    Oh yeah, I read a bunch of the dark tower books too. I think it's my favorite King series although the same criticism applies
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