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Post by sgtpeppr on May 31, 2015 10:04:16 GMT -5
if ive read it, i dont remember? just looked at the plot outline and its kind of a different direction to the books ive read. doesnt have that supernaturally type stuff like 'seize the night'. but he knows how to write, so youll get a sense of his style from pretty much anything i guess...
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Post by Lennon2217 on May 31, 2015 11:26:42 GMT -5
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Post by sammygreen on May 31, 2015 11:39:29 GMT -5
im reading "white hunter ,black heart" clint eastwood made a film of it class
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Post by davidjay on May 31, 2015 16:42:05 GMT -5
Just started reading Special Sound: The Creation and Legacy of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, by Louis Niebur. Finding it fascinating so far. You get a detailed insight into how the Workshop's composers and engineers created new sounds by pushing the pieces of equipment available to them (initially reel-to-reel tape recorders, tone generators, oscillators...) to their limits and beyond. The sounds they made often blurred the line between music and sound effects, and you can see how what they did was really 'sound design' long before the term had been thought of. I think anyone interested in the history of electronic music would find this a good read.
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Post by Ross on Jun 2, 2015 9:57:46 GMT -5
Finished Row for Freedom by Julia Immonen the other day. And today started My Life as a Radical Lawyer by William Kunstler
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Post by Elie De Beaufour 🐴 on Jun 2, 2015 10:37:51 GMT -5
sgtpeppr Thanks for the Koontz recommendation. Finished False memory (finally) last night. On Out of the corner of his eye now. Junior Cain does in places remind me of a cross between King's Norman Daniels and Don Carleone from the Godfather.
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