Category: books


Looking Back on a Book from My Youth

So, I’ve been bad about posting lately, but it’s not for lack of things to talk about, perhaps it’s work, perhaps the fact that I can’t force myself to get online after a whole day of sitting in front of the computer at work, who knows.

A couple of weeks ago I re-read the Iron Tower trilogy (an aside, follow that link and read the first customer review on the page, “Like Watching a Train Wreck in Slow Motion”). The last time that I read it was when I was about 12 or 13 perhaps and back then I loved it. It Iron Towerwas by anyone’s reckoning, a Tolkien fan’s attempt at writing something in the Tolkien realm. The author, Dennis L. McKiernan, and his publisher had even reportedly asked the Tolkien estate if they could include this in the Middle-Earth realm, to which the Shire-folk politely declined. As a youngster, none of this bothered me. The only thing I cared about was the action, the monsters and the medieval setting. I played Dungeons and Dragons religiously and loved all things “dork”. I enjoyed the books of the Iron Tower trilogy immensely, to the point that I carried an emotional reverence for them into my adult years. So in the past year or so, when I finally started getting back into the speculative fiction realm, and paid my back-dues to the Nerd’s Industrial Union, Local #3.14etc… I was excited to read this book again. It was actually a quest in itself to get the book, I tracked down an old friend previously, he reminded me who the author was and then I had to look around quite a bit online because the book isn’t in print anymore.

Eventually I lucked out and found a copy on Bookmooch (cool idea, check it out).

Finally after a couple of months on the journey, the book arrived. I immediately began reading it, the child inside me ran skipping through fields, woo-hooing and scaring the rabbits from the tall grass. Fifty pages in, the adult Nathan was outwardly trying hard to stick with the book, trying not to feel like this was an author’s very trite dry-humping of a master’s style. I am nothing if not mulish in my stubbornness though, you can verify that with Juliette. I plodded on, dreading all of the crappy repetition of lines such as, “the arrow that strays might weller been throwed away”. I’ll not bother to give any context to the quote, then I’d have to recount some of the story, which I’d rather not do. I will say that this line is repeated no less than 500,000,000 times in the text. Hard to believe, I know, considering that would make this book about a million pages long. Believe me, it felt like it.

To his benefit, I’ve never read anything else that McKiernan has written and these were his first books. Doing a simple search on his name pulls up a multitude of books, giving the impression that he’s made a career of writing. Kudos to him, he has achieved something already that few will ever attain. The issue I have is more my own I suppose. This was one of those GREAT books of my childhood. I mean it must have made an impression on me if the good memories lasted all this time. Which is why I’m all the more disappointed by reading it again and seeing it so flawed.

This book made me appreciate Tolkien all the more, because it simplified the whole Lord of the Rings thing for me, which to a child can get a bit dry and tedious. But the curtain has been pulled back on the magic that the Iron Tower held for me. In a way, it’s a bit of lost innocence I suppose.

Anyways, I’m interested if anyone else has ever had this experience with a book they loved. Maybe something like my scenario, where you re-read something from childhood, or maybe just a couple years later and found it was not as good as you remembered?

Deathly Hallows… ***Spoiler Alert***

I finished Harry Potter very quickly after work on Monday and have had a couple of days to digest it before writing up any response. Actually I’ve been dreading this post because I don’t feel like I could do it justice with a blog post, but here goes.

I’m going to say straight off that Snape being a good guy was really no surprise for me, I began to suspect some time back around the 4th book, but really things like his defense of Harry against Proffesor Quirrell back in the Sorcerer’s Stone during the Quidditch game when he was muttering a counter-curse were big clues. I’m still pleased that he was on Harry’s side, honestly Snape was one of my favorite characters in alan rickmanthe books and his dark complexity just made him more appealing. Also, Alan Rickman’s performance of Snape in the movies made me love him all the more. A couple of asides, anyone remember him in Robin Hood Prince of Thieves as the Sheriff of Nottingham opposite Kevin Costner?

He was also the voice of Marvin in the The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy among countless other roles.

I’ve heard mixed reviews of this and all of her books, from the Diane Rehm show last week, a couple of callers stated that JK Rowling is not literature in the vein of CS Lewis or JRR Tolkein. To whit, perhaps her books are not, neither was she born with the silver spoon and access to the best universities in the world. Of Rowling’s books, this one was by far my favorite, though I might be saying that because I’ve been craving some action for the last couple of books.

The end of the book was the predictable happy ending, but what more could you possibly want? First it’s a children’s story, don’t act like you weren’t expecting it and second, Harry as martyr? I think not, though he offered himself up for it, it wouldn’t have worked to have him end that way.

Other surprises- Neville not killing Bellatrix Lestrange, he should have been given the opportunity since his parents had died at her hands. I was a little surprised that Fawkes didn’t return to resurrect Dumbledore, although I thought he might have the chance to communicate via the portraits in the headmaster’s office. I was a little surprised that Ron or Hermione didn’t kick it, I thought that one of them would have to make the ultimate sacrifice for Harry…

Well, I’m going to keep it brief, and just say, I was pretty happy with the conclusion of the series. Part of these books grasped back at my childhood and helped slough off my jadedness. Rowling did an excellent job at connecting back with those feelings from that age. She was also great at tapping into the humanity of her characters and graying the absolutes we catch ourselves in…

Adios, Harry

Harry Dies.

Actually I have no idea if he actually dies in the book or not, but he will in this blog within about 2 weeks time, fret not, my oversaturated pets. If you haven’t been on the internet lately, good for you! Way to enjoy your summer- get out there and stretch those legs out! As for me, I live in south Florida, which normally looks like hell, but at this time of year, actually feels like hell.

For those who are in my predicament, we are aware of the leaks of the Deathly Hallows, days before its release. I’ve already paid for the book myself, but my curiosity was piqued when I heard about it. I almost downloaded it (from work, which would get me fired) and then thought, maybe I need my job a little bit longer… By the time I returned home for the day, I thought, to hell with it, I’ll just wait until I have the physical copy in my hand. Besides, I loathe getting on the computer longer than to look up a recipe when I’m not at work.

For those who understandably can’t wait for the book to be released (tomorrow at midnight), here’s how to get the book:

  1. download and install bittorrent
  2. go to Pirate Bay and search for the torrent of the book, throw pdf into your search for what I’ve heard is the better version.
  3. download said torrent and then open it with bittorrent, voila… in virtually no time, you know whether or not Snape is a bad guy and what happens after Harry was caught romancing a Crumple-horned Snorkack

Here’s one for the comic book lovers out there, Cap’n A, fighting for the American way…

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