Oct. 21st, 2009

angelophile: (Default)
  • 10:56 Hey, I was at this gig. ♫ blip.fm/~f3yq3 #
  • 13:06 RIP Vic Mizzy, best known for writing the themes for Green Acres and The Addams Family, who has passed away at the age of 93. #
  • 13:12 It was nice of my boss to tell me to take an extra day off. Of course, now I'm worried that there's stuff I should be doing at work, but... #
  • 19:57 Gotta love it when people do insane stuff with LEGO. bit.ly/12wiLv #
  • 20:03 Bagpuss, dear Bagpuss, Old Fat Furry Catpuss, Wake up and look at this thing that I bring... bit.ly/CuxX4 #
  • 20:08 I believe that there's a generation of Brits with a highly advanced sense of whimsy purely down to Oliver Postgate - bit.ly/Y5Kjw #
  • 21:26 Quarter of the way through the new Hitchhiker's Guide book. So far it is what an Oasis album is to Sergeant Peppers. #
  • 23:42 In a Stuffies mood today. I remember when indie music was... well, fun. I call it BC. Before Coldplay. ♫ blip.fm/~f51w8 #
Automatically shipped by LoudTwitter
angelophile: (Groucho Surprised)
lynda.com
I've been hitting a few new releases over the past week or so - I've finished Terry Pratchett's latest and am onto the new Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy novel. But first about the Pratchett.

Unseen Academicals is the latest Discworld novel and, like Making Money, The Truth and Going Postal other recent entries in the series, it focuses on the idea of taking a modern concept - in this case, football - into the Discworld setting.

The trouble is that it becomes clear very early on that the book doesn't really know what it wants to do. Is it an intelligent comment on individuality vs tribalism? Is it a funny book about the wizards attempting to learn football? Is it a romance story? Is it an introspective on being the best you can be, no matter where you came from? The answer is: probably.

And the trouble with trying to be so many things is that it ends up not being anything much. Oh, it's funny enough, but with too many characters and plotlines fighting for attention - it starts off being about the wizards and they soon end up being more like cameos by the end of the book with their plotline forgotten as the new (and, frankly, blander) characters take over. The new characters, Glenda, Juliet and Mr Nutt and so forth are from the same stable that brought forth Moist, Christine and Pteppic and a number of other characters that strike me as being equally unmemorable. There's loose ends that never get resolved, details that don't quite ring true to characters/scenarios from previous books, and stray bits of story that just don't fit in anywhere.

Then there are the cameos, be they the Librarian, Rincewind, Sam Vimes or whoever, who circle into the story's orbit without contributing much, often act vaguely out of character and don't appear to be there for any reason other than being there. Vetinari's appearance is worth the price of admission for the scene where he gets drunk but I'm not sure when he got to be so chatty and gregarious.

Although the book is enjoyable, Pratchett doesn't really seek to break the mold or take things to the next level, like he did with Nation. It was a book I found all too easy to put down - while usually I'd finish a Pratchett novel in a couple of days, this took almost a week to get through. It's not bad, it's just not that great either - sadly, part of the course for recent Pratchett.

angelophile: (Cyclops - Get the girl kill the baddies)
ICv2 have now posted the estimated sales figures for September. I've skipped a month since the figures came out while I was on holiday last month, so I'll try and cover that. Or just ignore it. We'll see!

Blackest Night and it tie-ins have been the big winner in terms of unit sales and dollar sales were up again, 12% on the previous year, although part of that can be attributed to price rises on many titles. Marvel, particularly, has been pushing price rises across the board, to the detriment of unit sales. Of those raised to $3.99, the newly relaunched Ultimate line (Avengers and Spider-Man) saw some drop substantial drops from their second issues, dropping a around 25,000 copies each from the first issues, while another title recently converted to $3.99, Hulk, is also down substantially, with #15 down about 18,700 copies from the previous issue.

Now on to the titles I've been tracking:

Read more... )

July 2020

S M T W T F S
   1234
56 7891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 30th, 2025 03:28 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios