Books Read
Apr. 26th, 2019 08:27 am62. Worm, John McCrae (Wildbow) reread.
1.2 million words about the end of worlds and the nature of heroism. I think of it as being a response to Alan Moore's MarvelMan/MiracleMan and Watchmen, agreeing on some points and disagreeing on others.
1.2 million words about the end of worlds and the nature of heroism. I think of it as being a response to Alan Moore's MarvelMan/MiracleMan and Watchmen, agreeing on some points and disagreeing on others.
(no subject)
Date: 2019-04-27 02:25 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2019-04-27 06:11 pm (UTC)metahacker was also saying that I was reading at an incredible rate. Surely not by James Nicoll's standards. On the other hand he probably has 8 more hours a day to read.
My point is: I like books, and I like that other people like books. Speed is not an issue; it is not a competition, or a measure of anything other than how many books you get to read before you die. That exposes you to the possibility of more good books, though...
(no subject)
Date: 2019-04-27 11:09 pm (UTC)With Worm, part of the reason I'm reading it in this drawn-out way is that I have an awful tendency to binge. I have to limit myself, or I get drawn into and don't want to put it down, and attempts to extricate me, get me to go to sleep, etc. are met with snarls. I walk around with my head in the book all day. Spacing it out helps avoid this, so finding a book that was *serialized* is fantastic. The funny thing, though, is that since Wildbow is such an ungodly fast writer I'm actually reading it more slowly than it was written.
The result is that I've spent a longer time span with this book than any other book. My daughter was born a year before I started it, and now she's 4, and it has been a constant in my life for most of that time. It's an odd experience.