Fair enough.
Fair enough.
It was definitely assumed that we knew the work was an imitation of Mucha (whose work I was kinda familiar with but didn't know his name until sometime this past year).
The zombies in the Anita Blake series are completely supernatural, raised by necromancers (of varying power) through blood sacrifices. Should also mention that for the most part said zombies desire more than anything to lie back down in their graves and not to eat your brains.
That was the one moment in all seven books that really got to me. Anybody who has only seen the movies has no idea the impact that scene has in the books since Dobby was so poorly used by the film-makers.
Not that any of these are any sadder than anything else listed (and I can't argue with anything I've seen here that I've read) but just to expand the list a bit:
That's not flying, that's swinging with style.
A. You do understand that according to the movie mythology they are from another planet not Scandinavia, right?
Don't be sad, I love my AB- blood. Come sit with me and we'll be the rarest of the rare together!
Very nicely done. I wanted to smack down this fool but I couldn't have done it nearly as well as you just did. I'd heart you if that were still an option.
I can't remember, did the Dinotopians just run around naked?
It would really suck to live on the inside of one those.
As opposed to the converse of item #2?
69.1
When you look at how its structure is used to reflect the mental state of the narrator plus the audacious combination of chaos theory with linguistics then yes, I do consider it experimental. If you've read other things like it please share so I can expand my reading list.
Not to mention that Neuromancer was pretty experimental for its time.
All he needs is a bowtie and then he could also be cool before it was experimental!