Seems like an all-encompassing and somewhat personally biased comment?uzique wrote:
99% of sci fi is junk
my personal tutor writes it... cannot stand it.
English literature is 99% junk.
My german teacher used to write it and I hate it.
Fuck Israel
Seems like an all-encompassing and somewhat personally biased comment?uzique wrote:
99% of sci fi is junk
my personal tutor writes it... cannot stand it.
exactly what i said just 3 posts back. 'creativity and culture comes in waves'. genres fluctuate in and out of popularity and go through phases of high artistic acclaim and complete commercial plundering. why is it that when i say the exact same thing you fireback with some retort about academics and 'literature being snobby bullshit'... but then why you think the exact same thought and elocute it, it's common sense? jesus christ, exasperating.Dilbert_X wrote:
All genres get stale, and get spammed by people trying to make money.
Speaking as a nerd, I don't really give a damn about sci-fi literature. Asimov was the last writer I read in that category who I actually enjoyed.Dilbert_X wrote:
So why single out sci-fi?
UsWe nerds are just going to flame you.
Only read a couple, didn't think much of them.Grammer Nartzee- wrote:
Speaking as a nerd, I don't really give a damn about sci-fi literature. Asimov was the last writer I read in that category who I actually enjoyed.Dilbert_X wrote:
So why single out sci-fi?
UsWe nerds are just going to flame you.
as i've said before, ballard is the last you need to pay any attention to, historicallyDesertFox- wrote:
Speaking as a nerd, I don't really give a damn about sci-fi literature. Asimov was the last writer I read in that category who I actually enjoyed.Dilbert_X wrote:
So why single out sci-fi?
UsWe nerds are just going to flame you.
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2011-02-28 19:55:01)
I for one find it helpful.Uzique wrote:
do i need to repeat and elucidate every point i make about literature about 4-5 times?
Now you know how I feel in the piracy thread.Uzique wrote:
<frustration>
And in the bedroom.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Now you know how I feel in the piracy thread.Uzique wrote:
<frustration>
Uzique wrote:
rofl you're being more than a little conveniently reductionist.
you spoke positively about the 'message', hence the book is implicitly engaging. you spoke positively about the descriptive language, hence the implicitly complimentary style comments. this really isn't complicated. i can criticise someone's prose style after the first 10 pages. where are you getting confused, exactly?
Now. Again, the descriptive language I was talking about was later in the book...hence "the structure of the book leaves something to be desired." I've spoken of the lack of character and plot development, as they weren't the point of the book, IMO. Please point to where I spoke either positively or negatively about "the message," btw. I did neither. I said what he did was "interesting." That is a neutral, objective statement.I--once fucking again-- wrote:
Now, before the flames start...
I read it on a lark. I've been struggling to finish up a course and needed a break. I wanted to see what Beck could do with fiction. He's a surprisingly good writer. His use of language, particularly descriptive language is exceptional. The structure of the book leaves something to be desired. It's relatively simplistic and it's clearly used as a platform for his messaging. But his ability to take facts and weave them into a fictional tale, using the central theme of the Overton Window as a teaching point overall was interesting. Sourcing the facts at the end of the book was a nice touch, as well.
Award winning fiction? Not by any stretch. But not a bad freshman effort...assuming one doesn't consider his previous work to be fiction, of course.
Tennyson or Joyce?Uzique wrote:
i still want you to all read ulysses
now that would be a discussion
Last edited by Uzique (2011-03-01 18:04:20)