Definitely one you should read.What about Blade Runner and Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?? (No that is not a typo one of those ? is from the title of the book)
What about Blade Runner and Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?? (No that is not a typo one of those ? is from the title of the book)
I've found the DADOES? comic adaptation frustrating, because it really does print every word. Including the dialogue tags on word balloons.The novel is being adapted as a comic book that claims to be printing every word of the original, and might be an enjoyable way to experience it for the first time.
I've found the DADOES? comic adaptation frustrating, because it really does print every word. Including the dialogue tags on word balloons.
After you read The Time Machine, you might want to read The Time Ships by Stephen Baxter, which is a direct sequel, albeit dealing with much more modern and complex concepts of time.
Just finished Losing the Peace, which I enjoyed thoroughly.
Ok, I'll add it to my wishlist.After you read The Time Machine, you might want to read The Time Ships by Stephen Baxter, which is a direct sequel, albeit dealing with much more modern and complex concepts of time.
Yes. That book is awesome.
I've been reading it in chunks myself, three or four issues in a single go.That does sound annoying. I've been buying them, but I'm waiting until I have them all to read them.I've found the DADOES? comic adaptation frustrating, because it really does print every word. Including the dialogue tags on word balloons.
Ok, I'll add it to my wishlist.After you read The Time Machine, you might want to read The Time Ships by Stephen Baxter, which is a direct sequel, albeit dealing with much more modern and complex concepts of time.
Yes. That book is awesome.
I saw there was an authorized sequel to Dracula by Bram Stoker's grandson, is that any good?
...and I'm like, "Spock did that EXACT THING in STXI!""Ship captains are historically not especially generous when it comes to stowaways, Si Cwan. In extreme cases, the captain would be authorized to punt you out of the ship in an escape pod with a homing beacon and no further obligation to see to your welfare."
It's fun, although, oddly enough, it actually owes more to the various movie versions of Dracula (especially the Coppola version) than the original novel. Mina had a tragic love affair with the Count, etc.
In an afterword, the authors explain that this was quite deliberate, that they assumed the typical reader would be more familiar with the movies than the novel, so they wrote the book accordingly.
Fair enough, although it seems to defeat the point of making this the "official" sequel to Stoker's novel.
Although I don't see the logic in this case. If audiences are only familiar with the movies, why not try to remedy that? Why not make this Dracula book a direct sequel to the Stoker novel in order to encourage people to seek out the novel?
Have you tried Chris Roberson's DADOES? prequel, Dust to Dust? I can't say that it's done anything mindblowing, but for what it is -- a buddy cop story in the DADOES universe -- it's been decent.
Oh, ok. Thanks for the info.Ok, I'll add it to my wishlist.Yes. That book is awesome.
I saw there was an authorized sequel to Dracula by Bram Stoker's grandson, is that any good?
It's fun, although, oddly enough, it actually owes more to the various movie versions of Dracula (especially the Coppola version) than the original novel. Mina had a tragic love affair with the Count, etc.
In an afterword, the authors explain that this was quite deliberate, that they assumed the typical reader would be more familiar with the movies than the novel, so they wrote the book accordingly.
Fair enough, although it seems to defeat the point of making this the "official" sequel to Stoker's novel.
"Authorized" may be too strong a word, btw, since Stoker's relatives don't actually control the rights. And Stoker had no children; Dacre Stoker, the co-author of the book, is actually Bram's great-grand-nephew.
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