hells_half_acre: (Dean/Books OTP)
[personal profile] hells_half_acre
I have finished reading the Lord of the Rings Trilogy!!

It was very interesting to read something that I'd been told about since I was nine. I was surprised by some things... like how Tolkien doesn't write characters very well unless they are hobbits, and even those are kind of sketchy at times. Also, my best friend is such a huge Gimli/Legolas fan that I really expected there to be, you know, actual build-up to their friendship and a good deal of bromance. My friend always complained about how there wasn't enough Gimli/Legolas in the films, but my god, I think the films actually did it better.

I forget who said it recently... but I agree with the idea that Samwise, not Frodo, is actually the real hero of the trilogy. I also like Sam's ending the best, but I'll get to that.

Fellowship was extremely slow moving, and I was annoyed by characters acting illogically... not to mention the previously mentioned character-writing weakness. The Two Towers started off fairly slow, but then ramped up. I actually kind of liked the way he wrote non-chronologically, and instead followed one storyline before going back to the departure point and following another storyline. It made events less repetitive. I usually always write chronologically when I'm writing from multi-POVs, so it was interesting to see it done a different way.

I think Return of the King was probably my favourite book. It was pretty action-packed, and the characters were written the best in it. I had been warned that the ending dragged on, but it wasn't actually THAT bad. I actually thought it was kind of neat for Tolkien to include aftermath of everything.

And man, for a while there at the end, Sam is living the dream - getting to shack up with both his wife and his boyfriend!

I do think the ending was a bit of a f*cked up message though...and it may just be me interpreting things in a sort of twisted way... but to me, the ending just seems like a neon sign that says "Suicide is a good solution to your problems!"

Anyway, better lessons I learned from Lord of the Rings:
1. Don't accept presents from world-traveling family members unless you know the object's provenance.
2. Always make sure that your loved ones are dead before you start the whole grieving process.... we'll just tack this lesson onto the horror-movie lesson, and we'll just say "Always make sure that dead people are actually dead!"
3. Whenever possible, allow your enemies to kill themselves - saves you the trouble.

I'm going to eventually read the Hobbit, but I think I'm going to wait until all the films come out first. I kind of like seeing the films first and then reading the books - since seeing the films doesn't affect how I enjoy the book, but reading the book affects how I enjoy the films (if that makes any sense.)

I'm not sure what I'm going to read next. I've gotten some suggestions on FB - World War Z, Snow Crash, The Night Circus, and Monkey Beach have all been suggested. As well, I've been recommended Karen Chance's books, but I'm not sure those are available in audiobook, so they might have to wait until I'm ready for a new paperback (I don't go through paperbacks as fast as I go through audiobooks).

Anyway, so far I'm leaning towards World War Z.

Date: 2013-06-21 07:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nerthus.livejournal.com
Book rec, here--I just read two great books by Alison Goodman, EON and EONA; they're teen books but so well written and suspenseful. They're about a young girl who pretends to be a boy serving in the house of a revered dragon master; she wants nothing more than to become a dragon master herself and bring riches and honor to her master's fading house, but if anyone found out she and her master are perpetrating a ruse pretending Eona is a boy, Eon, then the penalty is death. The 'world' of these two novels is a parallel of sorts to real world ancient China but also distinct and inventive; and of course there are DRAGONS, but the only people who can see them are the dragon masters; each dragon has a master and the master can only see his own dragon; the master and dragon share power and energy. But Eona finds she can see ALL the dragons, and in fact an elusive Mirror Dragon no one has seen or mastered in centuries returns and is slated to be Eona's dragon. But she still has to pretend she a male, Eon, and while hiding that she has to fight against another evil dragon master and the evil brother of the new emperor, who wants to kill the new emperor and all his other siblings and take over the empire himself. I like books with dragon themes but the paranormal ones always seem to have hunky dragons who look like male model humans, sigh; in this two-book series the dragons are actual dragons, and there is such a rich history the author creates of these dragons and successive dragon masters and this world's politics and people that it just sucks you right in. There IS a 'romantic' entanglement of sorts but it blends very well into the overriding action and plot of the books; I also loved one character who is a very important part of the novels and is in effect a transgendered person and one of the most interesting figures in the series. If you look the books up on Amazon they have a 'look inside' option and you can read the first part of Eon to see if you like the style, etc. I really enjoyed this story and in fact got so stirred up emotionally over some parts of it that I had to put it down and calm down before going back to it; certain characters put me in such a rage I wanted to call down my own dragon to do some righteous smiting, ha!!

Date: 2013-06-21 07:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hells-half-acre.livejournal.com
Ooo, thanks for the rec! It certainly sounds like something I would enjoy. DRAGONS! And I don't mind reading "teen" books at all, as long as they're well written...actually, sometimes I prefer them, as "teen" books are far more likely to have happy endings.

Also interesting that there's a transgender character. I'm currently writing a fantasy novel where the protagonist is a "genderless" character, so I've gotten a bit more interested in how other books handle non-binary-gender characters.

Date: 2013-06-23 10:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nerthus.livejournal.com
If you do read them I'd love to hear your review!

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