thats classic Stephenson though. Spend 800 pages building the world, and then conclude the last 1/3rd of the story in a single chapter.I may be the only Stephenson fan on here, but even I was unhappy with SevenEves. It is functionally 2/3 of a trilogy in one book.
Loved the story, loved the world, loved the post-apocalypse, left wanting another 1/3 at least. Maybe even another book that length wrapping everything up.
You're not the Stephenson fan here, I loved Anathem, i've read it several times, but I have the same thoughts on SevenEves you echoed.I may be the only Stephenson fan on here, but even I was unhappy with SevenEves. It is functionally 2/3 of a trilogy in one book.
Loved the story, loved the world, loved the post-apocalypse, left wanting another 1/3 at least. Maybe even another book that length wrapping everything up.
I'm halfway through One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. So far it's just as good as the move, not better though, that is a really good movie.
Yeah I was glad of that. One of the guys in my Warzone squad chose it for book club and I was worried I would have been bored to death. The change in perspective really makes you think about what's going on in a different way.It's a really good book. I like how it's a different perspective of the same story.
No I'm not. The book drags a bit in a few spots. Part one could have been a fourth shorter.You're nuts
And the movie takes the safe approach and tells the story from McMurphy's point of view, as well as cutting out significant portions of the horrors of being in a mental institution.
If I wanted my movies to be like books I would just read books.And the movie takes the safe approach and tells the story from McMurphy's point of view, as well as cutting out significant portions of the horrors of being in a mental institution.