anatneu

Ana Neu Neu itibaren Manamelkudi, Tamil Nadu, Ấn Độ itibaren Manamelkudi, Tamil Nadu, Ấn Độ

Okuyucu Ana Neu Neu itibaren Manamelkudi, Tamil Nadu, Ấn Độ

Ana Neu Neu itibaren Manamelkudi, Tamil Nadu, Ấn Độ

anatneu

The Whisperer in Darkness (Kind of long for what you get. I read it before but didn't realize. Mi Go trick main character into coming to a farm in the hils. Then he finds face and hands of friend in chair.) - In the Vault (Creepy - great last line ending, similar to Statement of Randolph Carter.) - The Call of Cthulhu (Awesome writing. Great famous lines, "Only poetry or madness could describe...", "Then the Old Ones would teach them new ways to shout and kill and revel … and all the earth would flame with a halocaust of exstacy and freedom.") - The Colour Out of Space (Can't remember) - The Dunwich Horror (Very cool and Lovecraftian, the good guys actually win though. A bit too long, but scary and the first real description of one of the creatures.) - The Haunter of the Dark (Pretty standard Lovecraft. Like the fact that this thing lived in a really old building right in the middle of town.) - The Music of Erich Zann (Awesome. Playing keeps the monsters away and his window looks into incalculable depths.) - The Picture in the House (Would have been better but the accent was annoying.) - The Terrible Old Man (Good but too short, not scary enough) - The Thing on the Doorstep (Started out sounding contrived, and the writing wasn't as good as usual. But then it got creepy at the end. Was also pretty original.) - Cool Air (Guy's body is dead, to preserve it he keeps his room cold and soaks himself in chemical baths. He's living through force of will. Then his body starts to deteriorate.) - Pickman's Model (Cool, more easy going style than most Lovecraft. Scary and dark.) - The Outsider (Not sure when I originally read this story but I never forgot it. This is the one where the narrator has lived all his life in a closed off castle and doesn't realize he's a monster until he sees a mirror. Kind of silly though because he could have seen his arms and legs.) - The Rats in the Walls (Man rebuilds the ancient residence of his family and finds a subterranean world where humans were bred for food and his family was part of it. Creepy but hard to understand while you're reading it.)

anatneu

What a sad, bleak and depressing continuation. And, yet, I cannot stop reading. Seriously, could humanity get any worse? I love how Butler can take humans and expose their weaknesses so well. How utterly stupid, pointless, and unself-aware (is that a word?) do we (humans) look in this book? Really, it is saddening to think about. At first, as any person, I would deny that humans would act the way the resisters act in this book, and yet, the truthful part of me knows! I know, humans would act exactly this way. Killing in fear, shunning anyone making a different choice. Stealing and raping women. Was Butler so good at perceiving human weakness and nature? How she could translate this to a science fiction story is beyond amazing. Because really - how awesome is it to use science fiction to teach us about our own reality? Maybe she isn't the first (certainly not), but I find a pleasure in reading her interpretation, knowing that not only is she female, but a black female. Yes, girl power. Thank you ladies. Not to completely dog the humans though. I mean, really, Oankali have no concept of freedom. Any being "below" them is subject to trading, whether they want to or not. Because of course, even when the subject says no, the Oankali knows they really meant yes. lol I don't want to give away too much of the book, so I cannot comment too much on the events of the book. One last comment: I was glad to see a little less alien sex, although saddened that it was traded in for human rape. Thankfully, that was never really described in any sort of detail.