KRAD said:
i]Frankenstein[/i]? Really? I first read Frankenstein -- which quickly became, and still is, my favorite work of literature -- in a Romantic Literature class in college, and that was at a Jesuit university (Fordham) twenty years ago.....
If only my former art teacher had checked my official web site before introducing me prior to my speech on Friday night. He read off a list of "my" accomplishments that left me explaining to the audience moments later that, in fact, I was not fluent in Japanese, nor had I studied World History or anatomy....Hoshi_Mayweather said:
I almost confused you with the 'other' David Mack, who did 'Kabuki' for Icon comics...(until I saw the blurb on your page)...![]()
Well, not to put words in your professor's mouth, but if he's that old, it could be as much the fact that Frankenstein was written by a woman as the fact that it's genre. Mary Shelley's being considered among the Romantics (along with Dorothy Wordsworth's) is a comparatively recent phenomenon, one the Grand Old Farts are probably still having trouble with. Many of the older texts I studied on the Romantic period (the 19th century was my specialty in college) were completely dismissive of any contribution made by the female half of the population, in particular dismissing Frankenstein as a lesser work, in part simply because it was prose, and therefore not as "elevated" as verse, and in part because the person writing it had the temerity not to have a penis.Seems logical enough, right? Well, the prof, who must be pushing eighty but has a mind like a bear trap, fixes me from across the conference table and says: "Please, Mr. Asselin, we're trying to have a serious discussion here." One of the more extreme reactions perhaps (he must have seen the Boris Karloff movie as a kid and been traumatized, I speculate), but I still find that (a few profs excepting) trying to reference speculative works still gets a pretty chilly reception, particularly amongst older faculty.
Extrocomp said:
I haven't read very many Trek novels but the worst one in my experience is Price of the Phoenix. The characterisations were terrible. It all seemed like some kind of fanfic.
They wouldn't get away with something like this nowadays.
ronny said:
I haven't ready Kobayashi Maru in years and don't remember a lot about it but I do remember liking it. Seems to be on quite a few worst of lists though...
HIj'Qa said:
Enterprise, The First Adventure
blah
Brikar99 said:
I didn't like the second "Genesis Wave" book.
Hirogen Alpha said:
Brikar99 said:
I didn't like the second "Genesis Wave" book.
It was book three of that series that killed it for me. I liked how the second one wrapped things up... the third one got characterizations wrong across the board and didn't tell nearly as interesting a story.
Hirogen Alpha said:
Brikar99 said:
I didn't like the second "Genesis Wave" book.
It was book three of that series that killed it for me. I liked how the second one wrapped things up... the third one got characterizations wrong across the board and didn't tell nearly as interesting a story.
Christopher said:
Actually Envoy was my favorite of the Sulu audiobooks. I felt it was the least awkwardly structured of the three.
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