16 / 42
Oct 2017

Um.
Aside from reading school books (Macbeth and Dekada 70), I guess there's Good Omens (Gaiman and Pratchett), and A Darker Shade of Magic (Schwab).
Well...I learned a few things. Loads of things. Mostly involving dialogue and exposition.

The last few days I enjoyed "Carpe Jugulum" by Terry Pratchett - now there's no more witch novels for me to read! ;A; ...gues I gotta start again from the beginning XD

I'm reading through The Lunar Chronicles by Marissa Meyer. I finished the first book Cinder and am moving on to the second book Scarlet. I'm really liking it so far. I want to see where the story goes and how the author continues the story with multiple character point of views.

A Rumor of War, by Philip Caputo. A brutal first-hand account of a soldier's experience in the jungles of Vietnam. An excellent read.

I like that series!

Her use of multiple POVs was awesome! I learned so much about writing third-person limited from her.

I'm doing something new where I re-watched The Stand mini-series, am re-reading the novel itself, and am simultaneously reading the comic based on the novel.

I'm doing this to see the differences between each medium at a glance and the strengths and weaknesses of each, so I can apply those insights to what I do next for a series of mine.

9 days later

Ohhhh that's a good idea!

I often do that with anime I like. In on case, I played the otome game and watched the three TV series based off it.

It was interesting to see how they changed and merged different story elements compared to the original.

The 3rd book of 1Q84 by Murakami Haruki. Most of the comments I've read about it was that it's too slow, and the author gives the informations too slow, which is true, but I feel this is one of the charms of this novel. I really love how detailed the characters are. Their inner thoughts are sometimes kinda weird, but exactly thats why they seem to be real.

I've just finished reading Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman and I can definitely recommend it as an interesting, relaxing read.

The Dip by Seth Godin. Recommended by a business colleague. Pretty insightful so far

1 month later

I learned about POV's and the show not tell rule. So I'm happy with that. The book that I'm currently reading is the app called Tapas. Where I can read both novels and comics. In other words, a lot of things.

1

Reading this because I am a stereotype.

Not reading literary books because my adhd merges the text into grey blocks after a single page.

What the? Seriously? I have ADHD too and that has never happened to me. That is new.

Well adhd takes shape differently depending on the individual. I used to be unable to sort impressions at all, to the point where I could hear every convo going on in a room all at the same time. Couldn't ignore any of them to focus on the one that was relevant. When my brain ran outta power and fucks to give, I just turned off entirely and was near unreachable.

I have trained and worked past that so now that's no problem anymore. But books still are (rants and the like aren't but that's because they're usually just within the amount of text I can read of the same type without my head giving up) and I just don't do well with descriptions at all. The way books describe environments especially distracts me, not to mention the actions that it describes people doing mid convo or the different facial expression implications. My brain gets stuck on certain words, their sound, their many possible meanings, and eventually the words become meaningless to me. After that it becomes a grey block of nonsense.

I have actually illustrated the concentration problems I used to experience (along with this phenomena I just described) as the experience of a character:

Good thing you drew it. I now know what you mean, I actually had that happen to me before when I read textbooks. Not fiction books, I was trying to remember if I ever saw that from fiction. xD