Tag Archive for 'books'

Page 2 of 2

John Milius on Apocalypse Now

I picked up The Apocalypse Now Book recently, and I’m eager to read it. Few movies — in fact, I can’t think of any off the top of my head — are as all-engrossing and poetic to me as Apocalypse Now.

I would buy the recent Dossier edition DVD set, but it still isn’t available in Denmark, and Sandrew-Metronome won’t allow for Danish stores to carry the region 1 set. Understandable; imagine what would happen if I could just walk into a store and buy it?! The horror. The horror.

Continue reading ‘John Milius on Apocalypse Now’

Top 50 Science Fiction & Fantasy Books

I found this list of the top 50 science fiction and fantasy books meme (according to the Science Fiction Book Club apparently). So I thought I’d join in. Bold is read and Italic is Reading.

Continue reading ‘Top 50 Science Fiction & Fantasy Books’

Script Writing and Halloween Getaway

So, today was the second to last of the twelve script writing sessions I’ve attended at work. My relative quiet over the last few days have been from my working feverishly on shaping the lump of sloppy cookie dough representing my script, Caged, into something half-presentable as a ‘first draft’.

Well, things came to a head yesterday, as I realized that I had been too careless in defining some of the key turning points of the story, and it as a whole was tearing itself apart from trying to go in too many directions.

Left with two options, either fold and sit this round out, or take the challenge and do a rewrite for today, I decided on the latter. So since yesterday, until our class beginning at three in the afternoon, I hammered out about twenty pages of lyrically-poor, on-the-nose restructuring.

And while it makes for horrible reading, it was sourly needed, and the script is much better off for it.

Of course, we ran out of time, and so in a sense, all my efforts were for naught.

That’s not entirely true of course. Now I’ve got the full script, which is currently a healthy 28 pages and I just need to start polishing it down to something which can be read.

I’ve still got a horribly slow exposition-filled second act; I’ll have to figure something out to make it at least seem interesting.

Halloween Getaway

Rikke formulated a fantastic plan, and I followed suit. We’ve rented a small house in northern Sealand, where we’ll be going from saturday till Wednesday.

I know what you’re thinking: “Hey, that’s halloween, ain’t it?”. Yes; yes it is. And that’s why we’re filling up our bags with books and movies (most of which are of the horror variety). It’ll be fabulous.

For my part, these are the books I’ll be towing with me:

Alastair Reynolds – Revelation Space

On the planet Resurgam, archæologist and scion of House Sylveste, Dan Sylveste, is engaged in an archæological dig, researching a species known as the Amarantin and cause of their apparent mass extinction, dubbed “the Event”. He has to face several political problems on the colony, including a power struggle between the archæologists and those interested in terraforming the planet to make it more comfortable. #

Alastair Reynolds  – Chasm City

Chasm City is framed and largely written in the voice of Tanner Mirabel, a security expert who has come to Chasm City to avenge the death of his former client’s wife at the hands of a “postmortal” noble named Argent Reivich. #

I’m about 200 pages into this, and while it hasn’t truly gripped me yet, I’ve sworn that I’d finish it. I’m also reading the first of the books in Alastair Reynolds Revelation Space trilogy, named thusly. And while I was overjoyed with the first hundreds of pages, it bogged down in boring nonsense around the middle, and I’ve been stuck there for a very long time. I might bring that as well…

Terry Brooks – Armageddon’s Children

The world, now ravaged by nuclear war and plague, lies in ruins. Demons and their once-men underlings scour the continents, enslaving and experimenting upon what healthy young remain. Mutations from the fallout and poisons have produced offshoots from humanity – Moles (those adapted to living underground), Spiders (named for their agile, long limbs), and the scaly, brutish Lizards. Zombie-like creatures called Croaks roam free as well, searching for bodies to devour. Most humans are walled up in stadiums and arenas in large cities, fortified compounds filled with thousands of frightened refugees. A few, mostly children, live as tribes hidden in buildings on the streets. #

Robert Heinlein – Starship Troopers

Starship Troopers takes place during an interstellar war between the Terran Federation of Earth and the Arachnids (referred to as “the Bugs”) of Klendathu. It is narrated as a series of flashbacks by Juan Rico, and it is one of only a few Heinlein novels to use that narrative device. #

Frank Miller – Batman: Year One

Bruce Wayne, aged 24, returns home from training abroad for twelve years. In Gotham, he bides his time, waiting for the right moment, all the while preparing himself. Gordon, meanwhile, has moved to Gotham with his pregnant wife, Barbara, and pursues a career in law enforcement. #

Steve Wozniak – iWoz

Describes the creation of the first personal computer, details engineer Steve Wozniak’s life before and after Apple, and provides a personal perspective on the invention that helped ignite the computer revolution. #

Jeff Hawkins – On Intelligence

On Intelligence: How a New Understanding of the Brain will Lead to the Creation of Truly Intelligent Machines is a book by Palm Pilot-inventor Jeff Hawkins with New York Times science writer Sandra Blakeslee. The book explains Hawkins’ memory-prediction framework theory of the brain and describes some of its consequences. #

H.P. Lovecraft – Omnibus 1: At the Mountains of Madness

These tales of horror are in the true gothic tradition … full of hinted terrors and unholy stenches. They are something very much out of the ordinary, a real collector’s piece for connoisseurs of the unusual! Lovers of the macabre, the sinister, and the uncanny, take note. #

I very much wish I had the fifth volume of Akira (since I just bought the sixth), but oh well. But, as you can see, I’ll be a busy little bee. Especially considering that I also have to finish the second, and potentially final, draft during that time. I doubt I’ll have time to read more than a few, considering all the movies and food that also need to be devoured.

Should be interesting.

Lucasarts, DroidMaker, Sam & Max

Michael Rubin has written, and is currently touring with, a book on George Lucas and the Digital Revolution, called DroidMaker. This is interesting enough for me as it is, but the great thing about it, is how you can download chapter 1 and 18 off of his blog. This is interesting because chapter 18 deals with the creation of the Games Group, later to become Lucasarts Entertainment.

And that is interesting because they remain, dispite many quite ‘bleh’ titles, one of the most significant game companies in the world.

And while you ponder that, you can check out some of this cool Sam & Max swag (I will kill for those two prints. Kill I tell you!).

City != ++Village

I don’t know where I picked it up, but someone somewhere, once said something along the lines of:

“A city isn’t just a big village.”

And it is ever so true.

Update: It was Jane Jacobs.

Baddest Motherfucker in the World

“Until a man is twenty-five, he still thinks, every so often, that under the right circumstances he could be the baddest motherfucker in the world. If I moved to a martial-arts monastery in China and studied real hard for ten years. If my family was wiped out by Columbian drug dealers and I swore myself to revenge. If I got a fatal disease, had one year to live, devoted it to wiping out street crime. If I just dropped out and devoted my life to being bad.

- Neal Stephenson, Snow Crash, paperback edn., ROC, 1992, p. 254.

Dear Diary

It’s been some time since I last wrote in you, for that I am sorry, but I seem to be so busy with various other things. You’ll be happy to know, that one of these things is a new cover for your now half-dingy pages (sorry, but it’s true…).

Anyway, today I managed to finally catch up to an inbox crowded with week old mails. I sure hope I managed to get around everyone who was kind enough to write me, even if I did use short to-the-point sentences.

Yesterday I started playing Fable. It’s looking good so far I think. Though some people have critiqued it for not being what Peter said it would be. My only suggestion is that they try developing games themselves, that would be the end of that.

I expect to finish my copy of If Chins Could Kill tomorrow on the bus. Great book by the way, Bruce Campbell is a really honest guy.

About the bus; I biked to work the entire summer, but I must confess that I enjoy taking the bus, since it allows me to read for about an hour a day. Something which I otherwise never seem to be able to find the time to do. But of course, if I never take the time, how can I have it?

Another book I recently finished, was The Humane Interface, written by the guy who designed the original Mac. I borrowed it from Brian. What an eye opener! This book should really be mandatory for any kind of interface designer. Finally I got my hatred for the caps lock key and the behavior of the alt key in Windows justified. Moded interfaces are a grave injustice to human kind!

Saw Ladykillers and ate flapjacks / pancakes yesterday. The pancakes were better then the movie. Though it wasn’t bad. Nor particularly good… Not the best Coen movie out there, but worth your time I think.

I borrowed Troll and Troll 2 from Thor, with a promise of absolutely horrible waste of time and possible outbreak of cholera.

That’s all for now. Have fun.