Raz
Bluelighter
Hey vanth, if you liked Sandman, Vertigo has put out a couple of mini-series featuring Death of the Endless....I don't know if they've been put together as a trade paperback or anything, but Minotaur could find out. Also, Peter Milligan's Shade the Changing Man is fucking AWESOME. But again, I don't know if any of that stuff has actually been collected outside of the original comic print run.
I can't remember if I have posted this already, but I am currently about halfway through reading Mao, by Jung Chang and Jon Halliday. I read Jung Chang's Wild Swans years ago when it first came out and it is still one of my favourite books today. I have been meaning to get Mao for ages, but only recently gotten around to it.
It is a really dense read...over 700 pages long, and it covers the life of Mao Tse-Tsung from his humble origins to eventually ruling all of China. It's not particularly pleasant either because the man was a fucking evil self-serving bastard who had a fetish for destruction...there was a point last week when I had to actually put it away for a couple of minutes because it was a bit too overwhelming, but it's a fascinating read. It's really tragic to see how he systematically fucked over the lives of everybody he came into contact with, with not only complete disregard for human life, but actual disdain for it. He really comes across as a cartoon supervillain in places, it's hard to imagine a real person actually being that intent on destroying everyone beneath him and getting away with it without ever having to pay for what he did.
Very sad and makes me angry, but very very well written.
I can't remember if I have posted this already, but I am currently about halfway through reading Mao, by Jung Chang and Jon Halliday. I read Jung Chang's Wild Swans years ago when it first came out and it is still one of my favourite books today. I have been meaning to get Mao for ages, but only recently gotten around to it.
It is a really dense read...over 700 pages long, and it covers the life of Mao Tse-Tsung from his humble origins to eventually ruling all of China. It's not particularly pleasant either because the man was a fucking evil self-serving bastard who had a fetish for destruction...there was a point last week when I had to actually put it away for a couple of minutes because it was a bit too overwhelming, but it's a fascinating read. It's really tragic to see how he systematically fucked over the lives of everybody he came into contact with, with not only complete disregard for human life, but actual disdain for it. He really comes across as a cartoon supervillain in places, it's hard to imagine a real person actually being that intent on destroying everyone beneath him and getting away with it without ever having to pay for what he did.
Very sad and makes me angry, but very very well written.