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Last year, I dreamt I was pissing at a restroom, but I missed the urinal and my penis exploded.
So you know now that I like fantasy genre in general. Can you give me some titles? I was wondering...how about Tolkien's trilogy (remember that I want it to be in English). What's your thoughts?
Quote from: Wookash on January 26, 2010, 06:43:58 pmSo you know now that I like fantasy genre in general. Can you give me some titles? I was wondering...how about Tolkien's trilogy (remember that I want it to be in English). What's your thoughts?They are very boring. Very. Boring. Sure you should read them just because they defined a genre and whatnot, but very. boring.
I attend grammar school, last grade, and ignorance is all around me. Well, good for them. Ignorance is bliss.
They are very boring. Very. Boring.
If you haven't read them the golden compass and the subtle knife are good. The last one totally sucks though.
I'm going to buy myself a book but I don't have any idea what's worth reading lately. I want it to be written in English. I've read 3 Christopher Paolini's volumes (Eragon, Eldest, and Brisingr) and loved it.So you know now that I like fantasy genre in general. Can you give me some titles? I was wondering...how about Tolkien's trilogy (remember that I want it to be in English). What's your thoughts?
Ugh, thank you American cinema...Its not the Golden Compass, its The Northern Lights.
For some time during the pre-publication process, the series of novels was known as The Golden Compasses. The word Compasses referred to a pair of compasses—the circle-drawing instrument—rather than a navigational compass. Pullman then settled on Northern Lights as the title for the first book, and continued to refer to the trilogy as The Golden Compasses. Like the eventual title for the trilogy, the original title The Golden Compasses comes from a line in Milton's Paradise Lost.[1]In the United States, in their discussions over the publication of the first book, the publishers Alfred A. Knopf had been calling it The Golden Compass (omitting the plural), which they mistakenly believed referred to Lyra's alethiometer, because the device superficially resembles a navigational compass. Meanwhile, in the UK, Pullman had replaced The Golden Compasses with His Dark Materials (a title that Pullman had taken from a line in Paradise Lost) as the title of the trilogy. According to Pullman, the publishers had become so attached to The Golden Compass that they insisted on publishing the U.S. edition of the first book under that title, rather than Northern Lights with the title used in the UK and Australia.
Quote from: iDante on January 27, 2010, 12:34:18 amIf you haven't read them the golden compass and the subtle knife are good. The last one totally sucks though.Ugh, thank you American cinema...Its not the Golden Compass, its The Northern Lights. The trilogy is called His Dark Materials. And the Subtle Knife nad the 3rd one, The Amber Spyglass, are 2 of the best books I have ever read.