noise dept.

@theartofmadeline
One Nice Bug Per Day
Peter Solarz
almost home
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
dirt enthusiast

blake kathryn
🪼
styofa doing anything
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
$LAYYYTER

titsay
tumblr dot com
DEAR READER
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
KIROKAZE
AnasAbdin
we're not kids anymore.
todays bird

seen from Austria
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Italy
seen from United States
seen from Colombia

seen from Bangladesh
seen from United Arab Emirates

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Denmark
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@helxguu
Hi Mr. Gaiman — Not sure if you’ve answered this before, but are you able to share with us any of the determining factors that qualify a show for renewal on Netflix?
While I’m excited for season two of Sandman and the first season of Dead Boy Detectives, I’m also hesitant to watch. Netflix seems to have a penchant for cancelling critically acclaimed or fan favorite shows, particularly adaptations (Lockwood & Co and Shadow and Bone are recent examples).
How many people watch it, and how many of the people who watch it watch all the show in a certain amount of time. (Sandman for example easily got the first category because enormous millions of people watched it, but it took the viewers a long time to watch all of the episodes and they did not binge -- and as far as Netflix is concerned they want you to binge and not to spread things out --which is why they hesitated over Sandman's renewal for a long time until they realized that people were actually watching it all the way to the end and had not abandoned it even if it took them longer than usual altogether.)
Binge is the solution!
For school we're reading "Paradise in the Palm of her Hand" and in our book discussion the other day my teacher got really upset because we were calling it a fanfiction of the bible. He insisted that there is a difference between a retelling and a fanfiction and said he gets upset whenever someone calls a retelling a fanfiction.
His reasoning for this is that fan fiction is just for fun while a retelling looks for a deeper meaning.
I personally think that any story using pre-established characters or worlds that that author didn't create is fan fiction so that includes "Paradise in the Palm of her Hand" and any other story that retells or builds upon biblical stories.
What do you think? would you consider books like "Paradise in the Palm of her Hand" fanfiction or not? Also, would you consider Good Omens a form of biblical fanfiction?
Not really. I think of it as a The Omen film and the Just William books mashup.
The bit that I can't be abiding is the idea of your genre being defined by quality. For years I was told science fiction was bad and whenever I would point to something good that was science fiction I would be told that it couldn't be science fiction because it was good. It's just snobbery.
There is no reason fan fiction can't go deep.
That being said, a retelling of something doesn't necessarily make it fanfiction. I don't consider my Norse mythology book to be Norse mythology fanfiction. I regard it as Norse mythology.
What other Neil Gaiman work might you like?
The biggest thing to know about Neil Gaiman is that each work of his is a mixture of horror, fantasy, and subtle comedy.
That being said, each of his projects is pretty distinct from one another and there might be some that are more up to your tastes than others.
I haven't read some of his newer stuff (because I largely stopped reading as much since the early 2010s), but I'll do my best to remember what matters in other works.
Horror
The Sandman is a great work for horror fans. It's also great for mythology fans and other nerds, but horror is a major push and pull factors.
The comic is probably the greatest body of work Gaiman produced and it's recommended if you're a goth at heart and are comfortable with themes of death and humans being gods' toys.
The Sandman (TV) is a great adaptation, but it's very short so far and doesn't cover the best stories.
Coraline is a horror story for children. It doesn't have anything that's not suitable for kids, but it can be viscerally scary to some people. Both the book and the film are great.
Mirrormask is my personal favourite, it's a low budget film with mindblowing surreal imagery and one of the best soundtracks ever.
It's about a teenage girl who has troubles with her parents (who run a circus, btw) and who gets swiped up by her imagination into a bizarre world that is being eaten by her depression. Not a scary film, per se, but it's disturbing. However, it's a very warm film and it always makes me feel better.
Fantasy
Neverwhere is set in a dimension of twisted London Underground where everything that's straightforward in our world becomes weird and too real.
It really tickled my imagination, I highly recommend the book.
Stardust is set in a more high fantasy setting.
It features kings, witches, ghosts, and a star that fell to the Earth. It has a young protagonist who's not exactly the best or the brightest person, so if you hate such things, stick to the adaptation. In my opinion, the book is just lovely.
American Gods is a darker fantasy that asks the questions: "What if every god people ever believed in became real through the power of their worship? And then what if that worship started fading?"
It's set in the USA and because that country is such a melting pot, there are many gods. And not all of them are happy. This is the book that gave Neil Gaiman his reputation of a writer who loves weird sex scenes.
Humour
Stardust the film is often compared to Princess Bride. It's lighthearted, funny, full of imaginative adventures.
Just a very nice film with an all-star cast.
Anansi Boys is a spin off of American Gods, but it's a lot more lighthearted.
Anansi is a trickster god, so you know things will get funky.
I haven't read The Graveyard Book and The Ocean at the End of the Lane yet, but I hear they're very good as well.
Also, short story collections or Norse Mythology might be a good place to start if you want to get a feel of Neil Gaiman as an author first.
This is nice:
A frenzy of diverse LGBTQ+ characters
And therefore, it has been my safe place recently - to fell beinga part, if only for a short time, of the kind of world I would like to see - without prejudices and judgmental glances. Just simple and accepting.
Love is love is love
#love #Riga #50shadesoflove