I don’t mind if the setting’s Westernised, but if so they should culturally adapt the title. So it’d be something like, say, STEVE.
I don’t mind if the setting’s Westernised, but if so they should culturally adapt the title. So it’d be something like, say, STEVE.
Yeah, but now the trailer’s hooked up to the car.
Oh, crap, right.
The I Just Get These Headaches Queen, then.
There was an ice wyrm, no need to be picky.
....crashed on takeoff?
He’s already done something like this, with Sandman -- in another medium and more sprawling than most series, though.
If you add the possibility that Bran could turn into something inhuman and extremely long-lived like the last 3-eyed raven, whilst holding the throne, this is pretty much God-Emperor of Dune.
I suspect Pullman’s ambitions for the story grew a bit too much during the writing, and the final book suffered for it.
I feel a bit puzzled about how crafting’s become a must-have mechanism, I’m not really all that fond of it.
In fairness, if you meant the British Chris Evans, then you’d have been entirely correct.
The familiar version of that is usually attributed to William Faulkner, though something earlier from Samuel Johnson is quite similar:
It’s a pseudonym (she also writes as Megan Lindholm), and possibly meant to be gender-ambiguous at first glance.
It’s not Aliette de Bodard’s House of Shattered Wings you’re thinking of, is it?
Stick with it. The first few chapters of The Fifth Season take a little settling into (particularly that use of direct address), but the jumpy narrative calms down, and it’s a rewarding read.
It’s never going to win a world’s least contrived premise award, but the main character does have to put up with his age getting dropped from late teens to early elementary school.
If it had an encounter with Drogon’s flame, it may now be the Iron Mat.
It lacks the Thrones tie-in, but I thought Reigns: Her Majesty was very good as well.
I’d say Gravity, as well. Both it and Dr. Strange make a big deal of moving in 3D space in an unusual way, while Avatar’s trying particularly hard to immerse the viewer in a different world. Most films aren’t focussing on doing things like that (and it might be exhausting if all that many were).
It exists. I think it was founded because 4chan made a minimal attempt to have standards.