thee great one
Master of TOG-fu.
I liked Hatter M.
Maybe it was just because of Templesmith's art.
Maybe it was just because of Templesmith's art.
volumes one and two of the HP Lovecraft Omnibus.
Theres an omnibus now! I'm pretty sure I have most of his stories in one form or another though.... Decisions decisions...
There are a minimum of three. They're simply called HP Lovecraft Omnibus 1, 2, 3, and they're not particularly new.
Finished Ubik last night and loved it so much. Brimming with great ideas and archetypal yet enjoyable characters, it really had me hooked all the way to the end. Am now halfway through Cat's Cradle by Vonnegut, which is seriously making me want to join the religion of Bokononism.
I think that's how everyone feels when they first read Cat's Cradle.
Sirens of Titan is far and away the best Vonnegut book, though.
I recently discovered an excellent second hand English book store here in Amsterdam, with great prices, a comfortable library-like atmosphere and a dusty cellar filled with old sci-fi. I now have WAY too many books on my bedside stand. Let's see....
I recently read Breakfast of Champions and Galapagos by Kurt Vonnegut, and I've also got Cat's Cradle, Slaughterhouse Five and Player Piano waiting for me. Bill Bryson's Down Under book and Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll (for the second time) have just been finished, as well as Elvis, Jesus and Coca Cola by Kinky Friedman. I'm currently reading Ubik by Philip K. Dick (with A Scanner Darkly waiting) and Against a Dark Background by Iain M. Banks (with The Algebraist, Excession, Feersum Endjinn and Use of Weapons all waiting, not to mention The Bridge). I also have the first two Fafhrd and Gray Mouser collections by Fritz Leiber, volumes one and two of the HP Lovecraft Omnibus, Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon, The Book of Dave by Will Self, The Glass Books of the Dream Eaters by G.W. Dahlquist, The Mile High Club by Kinky Friedman, and the first two trilogies in the Thomas Covenant series by Steven Donaldson.
This is not to mention my To Get list.
Eek...
Well, I like Howard's Solomon Kane stories (a couple of which are short enough that I can use them for Halloween readings for upper elementary or middle school kids). I have most of them, collected in two slim volumes, which didn't cost much and don't take up a lot of space. They're basically stories of the spooky and supernatural, set in the late 1500s; a lot of them take place in Africa, which would have been a mysterious and "heathen" place at the time. Others take place in backwater parts of Europe: the English moors, the Black Forest region of Germany, and so on.
I have finally started reading Darkly Dreaming Dexter, and it's pretty much exactly how I thought it would be and it's great.
I like how you say "old-fashioned, outdated way of going about magic" like it's some kind of everyday thing like sales/marketing or toilet repair.Oh, of course. He was a racist, sexist, elitist son of a *****.
He did a lot of cool stuff and greatly influence occultism, but I think he represents a very old-fashioned, outdated way of going about magic.
Actually, according to The Morrison, marketing and business is the most prevalent and powerful form of magic in the modern world. It's all about symbols (logos) and incantations (slogans) that are meant to affect widespread change and influence.I like how you say "old-fashioned, outdated way of going about magic" like it's some kind of everyday thing like sales/marketing or toilet repair.
Or maybe magic does happen everyday!
Maybe magic... is SCIENCE! :shock:
Huh. I had thought about that before, but could never really put it together as a story idea.Actually, according to The Morrison, marketing and business is the most prevalent and powerful form of magic in the modern world. It's all about symbols (logos) and incantations (slogans) that are meant to affect widespread change and influence.