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Showing posts from October, 2017

The Martian: Potatoes, Poop, and Pioneers -

I am not a huge fan of reading science fiction, rather it has been such a long time since I ever read any science fiction in the slightest. I mean, I think the last piece of literature I actually read on the matter is Ender's Game and lets just say after about hearing about the author I didn't touch another book in the series. So the Martian, proved to be very interesting to me in the sense I wanted to keep reading it. Now the genre itself is super appealing to me. I love space things and anything to do with the future. I love talking about where our world is heading tech wise- etc. The Martian specifically should just be a lesson to everyone how you must survive and hopefully, you have former crew members and some competent people willing to come for you after getting stuck on literally another planet. Overall I liked the story, it didn't seem like I was reading anything new while diving into this though. Just seems like a tale I have heard over and over again. I mean we

A weekend all about Neil- it was meant to be

So my weekend was full of Neil. I watched the series "Lucifer" and read the book "Wolves in the Walls". Lucifer is 100% series I would suggest to anyone who enjoys the supernatural and a Hollywood show that actually has a pretty diverse cast of main characters. But to the book. I love Neil Gaiman's children's books. This one I do have to say is a rather beautiful one. The illustrator,

Harry Potter- The wonderful world of imagination

Gosh, I love Harry Potter and the series. My mother read me these books to me as a child and I remember loving them then and even now they still hold up. For me, this book is truly a demonstration of how wonderful imagination and magic can be. First off I really admire J.K. Rowling as a writer in the modern era and just who she is as a person. (Bringing attention to our incompetent president on a platform he has no business on.)  But back to Harry Potter. Harry Potter I think in and of itself is a great book for escapism for children honestly. For those who go through abuse or feel as though they are an outcast the book makes you feel as though there is something more out there. She writes Harry as a awkward troubled young Man who struggles with the death of his parents living in an abusive household that is introduced to this magical world. I think perhaps that is why I liked it so Much as a child because of the relatable. Because even though Harry was given the short end of the sti

The Hobbit: A Story of Men

I really loved the Hobbit. When I was younger I played an elf in a kid adaptation. Ended up for whatever reason getting my wand for behavior or something. So what I noticed about the Hobbit is the "we and us" Tolkien is inserting himself into the story. Which in fact is what he does after realizing that this was meant to be an oral story that he told to his children which that I thought that this story needed. Was an oral telling. Honestly, had I known I would have audio booked it. Regardless, so having seen the movie and doing the play before reading the book. There is so much that they actually changed about the book to be able to fit the movie adaptation. One thing I particularly found odd was the far less mention of Bilbo's mother, the elves themselves, the lack thereof women as characters, and the brown wizard vs. what they did with him in the movie. I mean, to be fair a majority couldn't help but have to be changed for the sake of Hollywood and making it appro

IT: Clowns in the Woods Man -

So I both read and watched the new movie as well as got through the book. And let me just start by saying there was quite a bit left out of the book from the movie but nothing I felt truly took away from the book. The book is gruesome. Like no joke it is one of those things that is just brutally gory which I think the second movie compared to the first acknowledged.  I also think that we just saw into the characters more so than we ever had. Obviously, movies can only cover so much. But the book just made me feel closer to these kids who in the end are just children and we see that with how they interact with one another and each other. You can even bring up the group sex scene that ends up happening in it (weird part) can be equated to a coming of age portion in the book and binding all of these kids together.

Beautiful Creatures: Castors = Witches I swear

So the book I read for our witches week was Beautiful Creatures by  Kami Garcia & Margaret Stohl. First, let me just start by saying that I genuinely dislike first-person stories. That rule definitely lifted a bit with reading "M iss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children" so I was willing to give beautiful creatures a shot. I like supernatural things. Even more so I like witches quite a bit. So for this book, it is sort of all about the consequences of good and evil as well as any teenage dream trivial romance. But it isn't real and blatantly so. Ethan is written for young teenage girls- the emotional romantic that isn't actually seen a lot today due to the devastating toxic masculinity in which boys are raised in. To me personally, he comes off as somewhat a whiny underling with delusional interests, however, this could be because in life love doesn't work just by seeing someone in a "dream" and hoping they would magically fall In love within