Hemingway hasn't been aging well for the last half a century.
Them might be fightin' words, in some circles (though I don't necessarily advocate for either position).
Hemingway hasn't been aging well for the last half a century.
Nah, he would have had to be as empty as Bateman to have all those brands roll so continuously off his fingers. Must have had a stack of GQ and society papers bigger than he was next to the typewriter. Still research even if it's contemporary.Does is count as research if you lived through it, like Bret Easton Ellis did? Or if the novel is more or less contemporary, being written in 1991? I feel like I could do something similar with the 90s without having to look up anything.
They've all aged badly: Heinlein, Clarke, Asimov. Just not interesting anymore. Bradbury not so much because he had a knack for characterization and his ideas are still-thought provoking.This talk of aging badly... I've just read (well, listened to on Audible) The Moon is a Harsh Mistress. It wouldn't get published today. Mysogyny writ large on every page. And it's quite right that it wouldn't; we've moved on as a society. At least, I hope we have.
That being said, I don't regret it. Indeed, it's the first time I can say I've enjoyed Heinlein. Tightly-written with a unique voice, a compelling story, and morality that does ask questions of the reader. Placed against its historical context - the Cold War, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the concept of never-ending revolution - it's a really fascinating book. It's an insight into the psychology of a period of time, and although some of the attitudes are jarring it's a book that couldn't be written today. Read as a modern publication, it has aged badly. But viewed as a historical classic it flies in the face of that idea.
Huh?All classics at the same time, ironically. Because reasons.
Huh?
Why God gave us libraries. Though I can totally relate to the library having all but the final book in a series. Been there on more than one occasion.A co-worker recommended Matt Dinniman's "Dungeon Crawler Carl" series and I requested it from the library. Couldn't stop laughing at the story so I requested the entire series and...of course, they don't have them #1 available now and #2 in order. I bought what I thought was the 2nd book and read it (oops, it was the 4th book!) and I was at Chapters today to get the entire series (20% off sale) and...all of the books are hardcovers and like $45 - $52 EACH!!!
FFS!!! I don't mind authors making money but $50 each book when there are like 10 books in the series?!?!? That's $500 bucks on books!!!
IT WILL ROT YOUR SOCIAL CONSCIENCE.
A co-worker recommended Matt Dinniman's "Dungeon Crawler Carl" series and I requested it from the library. Couldn't stop laughing at the story so I requested the entire series and...of course, they don't have them #1 available now and #2 in order. I bought what I thought was the 2nd book and read it (oops, it was the 4th book!) and I was at Chapters today to get the entire series (20% off sale) and...all of the books are hardcovers and like $45 - $52 EACH!!!
FFS!!! I don't mind authors making money but $50 each book when there are like 10 books in the series?!?!? That's $500 bucks on books!!!
Sure, authors should get paid for their work, but at that price....how accessible are the books?For what is potentially years of work, that seems more than fair.
I'm working 5 part time jobs and living with family. Lots of my family + friends are also struggling with the costs of living these days. I know some people are visiting the local food bank.
That's Indigo brick and mortar just charging too much I think. Maybe if it's my favourite author ever? Even then I'm not big on collecting [hardcover].A co-worker recommended Matt Dinniman's "Dungeon Crawler Carl" series and I requested it from the library. Couldn't stop laughing at the story so I requested the entire series and...of course, they don't have them #1 available now and #2 in order. I bought what I thought was the 2nd book and read it (oops, it was the 4th book!) and I was at Chapters today to get the entire series (20% off sale) and...all of the books are hardcovers and like $45 - $52 EACH!!!
FFS!!! I don't mind authors making money but $50 each book when there are like 10 books in the series?!?!? That's $500 bucks on books!!!
Canadian currency.If people can't afford to buy books, the author will make $0. Most hardcover books, including those of Dinniman, fall in the $20-30 USD range. I assume the $50 price is in different currency?
I am not a fan of hardback books, especially giant 500-1000 page tomes. They're too heavy to hold comfortably as well as expensive. I prefer trade paperbacks, the version most often found in bookstores.