Priest-Kings of Gor - Two Star ☆☆
Slave Girl of Gor - Two Star ☆☆
Kajira of Gor - Two Star ☆☆
Thoughts About Stuff: “Quidquid praecipies, esto brevis." (Whatever advice you give, be brief.) ― Horace, Ars Poética
Armies of the Night - Norman Mailer - Five Stars ☆☆☆☆☆*
Wait. What? Five stars?
I have read Armies of the Night at least three times and will probably read it again. By my rating system that makes it a five star book. There is an asterisk up there though.
I have only read the "History as a Novel" section once. Now, after my initial reading, when I pick up the book, I go to the "The Novel as History" section. I enjoy it a lot. What Mailer was trying to do as a writer in providing two distinct views of the Pentagon March is interesting. I just don't equally enjoy both views. Does that make it a two-and-a-half-star book? Maybe. But then again, when I reread Moby Dick I now skip over the "Is a whale a fish?" discussions and stay with the meat of the story. Does that lessen Moby Dick? I don't think so.
George W. Parker
Doctor Zhivago - Boris Pasternak - One Star ☆
Yeah, yeah, I know... won the Nobel Prize and the Soviet Union would not let Pasternak leave the country to accept his award. But I didn't find it an interesting enough read to finish. One Star.
It's just another windswept Russian steppe story withering in the summer heat, freezing in the winter cold with a war to supply some action. Isn't that a Russian genre? Tolstoy did that. Solzhenitsyn did that.
I'm not saying it isn't a good read. I am saying I didn't finish it.
Oh, and the movie is too long also.
George W. Parker
I can't begin to estimate the tonnage of paper I have moved from house to house in my lifetime. So I have finally broken down and accepted ebooks as my standard reading method. Lying on the couch or sitting at the kitchen table my phone is just easier to use. From John Norman to Norman Mailer, H.R. McMaster to Edward Snowden the books are out there.
But, like many old LPs when you are trying to find them on CD, you may not find some books out there. That is why I still have two bookcases of "real" books waiting to be boxed up for my next move.
George W. Parker
Once again I am taking a stab at "Socializing" and "Connecting." (I wonder what the over and under is on the number of days this will last?)
I have updated my website - https://www.georgewparker.com
and consolidated my blogs into one so it is the same on:
Blogger - https://georgewparkertalking.blogspot.com/
Goodreads - https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4784146.George_W_Parker/blog
Website - https://www.georgewparker.com/blog
If you write, you probably want to be read. This is not Tolstoy's Russia, all snowed in with nothing else to do and nowhere else to go. People have so many other options (distractions) today: TV, Movies, Video consoles, Pokemon Go, and if nothing else they can solitaire on their phones. I think when you write it's important to follow the KISS method (Keep It Simple Stupid.) Make your story accessible. Keep it moving. Make it about something. Be entertaining!
George W. Parker
Writing is work. Thinking is a chargeable operation. Aside from actually stringing works together there's research, plotting out the story, character development, editing, making time to write, and a thousand other things to do before you even get to the selling your product stage; which I find is the hardest of all work.
Writing has been the one constant in my life for over fifty years. I have set it on a shelf for extended periods while I tried to make a living and raise a family. But it was up there on the shelf staring down at me at all times. I always knew it was waiting.
It's work. It's fun and exciting. It's humbling and frustrating. It is what I do.
George W. Parker