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Onion Budgie

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Posts posted by Onion Budgie

  1. I've started reading The Afterlife Unveiled by Stafford Betty, and am loving it.  It offers a slightly different perspective to Newton's Journey of Souls.  It's a short book (~120 pages), so I'm already halfway through.

     

    A hundred pages left to go with E.M. Forster.  The writing is beautiful, and so I don't mind that there's not much of a plot.  

  2. How on earth is it May?!  The days are zipping by.  (I wish it was warmer here.)

     

    I just finished Journey of Souls by Michael Newton, Ph.D., and it was phenomenally, life-changingly good.  I sent a copy of it to my father for his birthday; he was a mite perturbed.  He'll love it when he reads it (said confidently)!

     

    Now back to reading The Longest Journey by E.M. Forster, which I've sorely neglected.

  3. I've been playing a cute game, A Short Hike, which is available on Steam.  It's a little like Animal Crossing, with small quests and exploration, and funny conversations with animals.  Your character is a little bird whose eventual mission is to reach the top of Hawk Peak, but in order to do so you must collect a quantity of golden feathers which help you to climb and fly.  The graphics are retro, but it's such a sweet and simple game, and I've had fun with it.

  4. I'm past the halfway mark with my re-read of Ready to Catch Him Should He Fall.  I'm liking it a little better this time around, but it's still STRANGE, and the main character is just so passive that it's infuriating.  He absorbs situations and people like a sponge, and doesn't possess any character or backbone of his own.  It's the sort of book that leaves you with an uncomfortable tickle in the back of your throat.

  5. Appointment with Death was a fun read, and I didn't guess the culprit, so well done Aggie, for tricking me.

     

    I'm now attempting a re-read of Ready to Catch Him Should He Fall by Neil Bartlett.  This was one that I DNF'd halfway through a few years ago, because every single character irritated the heck out of me.  Bartlett is one of my favourite authors, however, so I felt that I should give it a second chance.  

  6. I can't see it, but I don't think it's a particularly good idea anyway.  If a new member begins to post and they don't get likes for whatever reason, then it leads to hurt feelings, and they disappear for good.  Likewise for long-term members, if they see trivial posts getting likes, but their own well thought-out posts getting no attention, it can lead to resentment.  Just my observation from other forums.

  7. Just finished Buster Keaton: Tempest in a Flat Hat.  I didn't enjoy it quite as much as the Harold Lloyd bio; I felt it was just one endless description of film plot after film plot, and not enough info on Keaton's life -- you know, the details that make up a biography.  :rolleyes:  I didn't learn anything new about Keaton, that's my main gripe.

     

    What with all the misery and hoohah currently going on in the world, I desperately need a good comfort read, and for me that's Agatha Christie.  I'm about to make a start on Appointment with Death.

  8. 5 hours ago, Athena said:

     

    No, I actually find the TV series funnier. I'm quite far into the book now, but I feel it's kind of dated. There are some racist and sexist jokes in it, which just isn't okay nowadays (back in 1990 though you didn't hear as much about it). I'm really glad the TV series added more characters of colour and more female characters, the jokes were changed too. There is even a non-binary character in the TV series, whereas in the book the character is a man. I also find things funnier with actors saying the funny lines so well, whereas in a book some of that effect is lost.

     

    I agree with you; it has definitely dated.  I did appreciate how Neil Gaiman developed Aziraphale and Crowley's relationship in the TV series, and opened it up a little further to interpretation.  You can tell how much MS and DT relished playing around with the nuances of that!  (I far prefer the TV series.)

     

    ~~~

    Edited to add:

    I just finished the Harold Lloyd bio, and thoroughly enjoyed it.  Now on to Buster Keaton: Tempest in a Flat Hat by Edward McPherson.

  9. I'm two-thirds of the way through Harold Lloyd's biography, and am loving it.  Fascinating behind-the-scenes moments from the silent film biz of the 1910s and '20s, and beyond.  It's made me want to rewatch all of Lloyd's films now.

     

    I've just ordered Agatha: The Real Life of Agatha Christie, which is a graphic novel of AC's life story.  The artwork is cute, I'm looking forward to reading it.

  10. I finished The Case of the Gilded Fly, and didn't think too much of it (dull plot, odd motives, peculiar character interactions, and some misogyny to top it off).  As it was the first in a series, I still might try another at some point, just to see if the author's style improves.

     

    I'm about to start Harold Lloyd: The Man on the Clock by Tom Dardis, which is a biography of the silent film star.

  11. I've noticed for a while now that this website has been displaying as "not secure", i.e. passwords, sensitive info, etc., could be easily stolen by hackers.  Is this something that will be addressed at some point?  Hopefully members here are not using the same password across multiple sites, otherwise... uh oh..?

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