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Showing posts from February, 2017

Weekly Small Talk #2 : Youtube Edition

Welcome to Weekly Small Talk, a new feature that I started because I'm both too swamped and too lazy to come up with fresh and original material. This is where I talk about books movies and other cultural stuff that I've consumed in the past week. This week I want to talk about Youtube, and some of the channels that make you happy that you have wifi. There are so many Youtube channels dedicated to movie reviews, book reviews, and just pop culture in general, that sometimes you need to seep through a lot of material to find the channel that really speaks to you. Here are some that speak to me in particular, and I want to share them with you. The Nerdwriter is the most popular channel on this list. I only discovered it a few months ago, but its creator, Evan Puschak has been making videos for years now. What makes The Nerdwriter stand out in the crowd is that Puschak isn't just making videos, he's making video essays . Now, he's far from the only video essayist ou

Weekly Small Talk #1

Weekly Small Talk is a new tradition, where I talk about books, movies, and other pop culture stuff that I have consumed in the past week. *** I don't know if I mentioned this before, but the library in my school has a great collection of fiction. Sci fi, YA, classics, contemporary, you name it. They have pretty much everything. Including the entire Hyperion Cantos series by author Dan Simmons. Hyperion Cantos is an epic sci fi series, that has won a lot of awards, and is considered to be a classic in the genre. I didn't know anything about these books, but my brother loaned them at the library, and I decided to give them a try. Right now I'm reading the first book, Hyperion . This book is a chunkster. It's almost five hundred pages long, and I'm not planning on finishing it anytime soon. Last week I watched a movie called The Babadook , on Netflix. The Babadook is an Australian-Canadian horror movie, that despite all the positive reviews didn't do th

November-February Book Haul

In the big exam/Christmas/back-to-school frenzy I completely forgot to do my obligatory book haul. Well, better late than never. The list is pretty long, but four of these books I bought at a sale as well as the two DVD's. And there's also that one book that I got for free. All in all, it was quite a bargain. Starting off at number one is the freebie, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks.  by Rebecca Skloot. I had to read this book in school, and I loved it. You can read my full review of it right here. Next we have Stephen King's memoir/writing advice book, On Writing. I actually read it a couple of years ago, and I'm looking forward to re-reading it someday. Then we have a classic, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde , by Robert Louis Stevenson, that I bought for my brother. I read it once before, but it was such a long time ago, so I'm looking forward to that re-read as well. The are three books that I got at an outlet for only one hundred kronor. These are St

If/Then: A Night at the Opera

I'm not a big theatre goer. In fact, the last time I went to see a play must have been ten years ago. While I have great respect for the theatre, I never developed a taste for this particular art form. Which made last Friday a bit of an exception, when I went to see a musical with a friend from school. Our school got a bunch of free tickets to the preview of the new adaptation of the musical  If/Then  at the Malmö Opera, titled Tänk Om ("What if"). And who can say no to a free ticket? If/Then was originally a Broadway musical that opened on March 30th 2014. It was written by Brian Yorkey and Tom Kitt and starred Idina Menzel in the lead role. It closed the following year. And now it made its way to Sweden. I had never heard of this musical before, and I was intrigued by the plot. If/Then is about a woman named Elizabeth, who moves back to New York City after a rough divorce. As she is waiting for her two friends in the park, her phone rings. And this is where th

Book Review: Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency

Title: Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency (Dirk Gently #1) Author: Douglas Adams Originally published in 1987 Source: I read the 1989 Pan Books edition that I found in the school library.  Blurb from the author's official website:  Dirk Gently is a private detective who is more interested in telekinesis, quantum mechanics and lunch than fiddling around with fingerprint powder, so his investigations tend to produce startling and unexpected results. A simple search for a missing cat uncovers a bewildered ghost, a secret time-traveller, and the devastating secret that lies behind the whole human history and threatens to bring it to a premature end. Sadly the cat dies. Dinara's Rule #1 for getting a good book rating: Never kill the cat!  For no story, no matter how captivating or fascinating, justifies the suffering and the eventual death of an animal, even a fictional one. Even if the said animal died peacefully. And especially, if Erwin Schrödinger is somehow