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The Girl On The Train, is a great book
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I too prefer books to films. But I do have a Kindle, which I know some people feel are not real books..
I read the whole GoT series by Martin some years B4 the TV-show, & b/c i have no access to premium channels, i have yet to see it. // Knowing they didn't stick to the original plots, i'm not too fussed about "missing" the series.
It might as well be a new concept, like a sci-fi story set in another author's "world" - as if someone set their own characters & setting onto Niven's RingWorld, following all the local rules for gravity, etc, but the plot, culture, & so on, is unique to the new writer.
I tend to prefer books to film, as U cannot get into a character's head in video the way U can in print, & the feel of a book is - to me - more immersive.
- t
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The Rivers of London books are really good. I enjoyed each and everyone of them. Dana Stabenow books are set in Alaska. There are something like thirteen of them.I loved the Philip Pullman 'His Dark Materials' trilogy too. I also loved the Game of Thrones books - the TV series was a little gory for me, I'm a sensitive flower
Having said that, I'm not really a fantasy fan (though I loved the earlier Terry Pratchett Discworld books). I recently read David Aaronovich Rivers of London and thought it was very well written, but I don't feel the urge to read the rest of the series.
I love Andrew Taylor's books - he's most well known, I think, for The American Boy. I've just finished The Fire Court, his follow-up to Ashes of London and really enjoyed it. I get the impression there's going to be another one in the series
I'd also read anything by Tracy Chevalier & Sarah Waters. I loved Ann Cleeves Shetland books (not so much her other series), and Peter May's Hebrides series. Oh, and Ian Rankin's Rebus novels. I also enjoyed Martin Cruz Smith's novels set in Russia... I seem to like fiction set in cold, barren places.
Some young people do read books. My 23 year old grandaughter is a reader. Her thirteen year old sister also reads a lot..
I do wonder how 12-YO to 20-somethings today, feel about books - having grown-up with electronic media, do books feel cumbersome, or just different?
I've noticed many 25- to 30-YO rarely READ anything in print that's longer than a news article, & many of them skim even those, which leaves me wondering if they can [or would] read a 300-page book of fiction -- & if they tried it, would they retain any of it, even if only while reading it?
They often seem almost allergic to print as a format - anyone else get this impression?
Maybe it's a Merikan thing - reading in the USA has come & gone in fashion many times, or maybe it's a change in schooling at that time-frame, when these young adults were 6 to 10-YO. I dunno.
Off the printed page, i also notice that many younger ppl can't *stand* silence - or just a lack of soundtrack to their lives; when they enter a quiet room, they turn on the TV - even if they don't intend to watch it, as background noise; or they flick on the radio, or an iPod on a speaker, or they're already wearing headphones...
Many wear headphones even while operating bikes, or when walking on the street - both are bl**dy dangerous, as U cannot hear traffic, auto-horns, a siren, & other environmental sounds.
I can walk into the woods, & feel relief that there's no elevator-music, mechanical noises, or chatter of monkey-brained humans - wind, birds, branches, the sound of water, even rain pattering is more welcome than the nonstop noise of human activity; i need a break from it.
Many younger folks seem addicted to it, as if human-made noises are necessary 24-7. Some sleep with the TV on.
I wonder if books will become collectible oddities, or will live in museums rather than the homes of ordinary folks.
Electronic things need software, which becomes rapidly outdated, & the text, photos, charts, & data on the OLD software are easily lost & irretrievable, b/c the new software iteration cannot translate the former entries into the new format.
Books are unchanging - they don't have a release 12.5, if U have light sufficient to make out the text, they are legible.
Most of the world's popn is poor - software & electronics are costly to purchase, relatively fragile, & require ongoing investments of money - new software, more RAM, models are retired... & electricity is not universally available.
Even if U cannot steal electrical power for the bare-bulb in the ceiling, if there's daylight, U can read a book, carry it with U, hand it to someone else.
3/4 of the world's popn is expected to live in slums, barrios, in the near-future.
The future of the world’s population in 4 charts
- terry
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Dana Stabenow books are set in Alaska. There are something like thirteen of them.
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