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<HTML>Although Thursday might get me for this, I think some 19th century books would improve greatly if attacked by some adjectivores.
I've read Austen, the Brontes, Hardy and Henry James, but I can't seem to warm up to them when they get more.... erm... descriptive. Maybe I'm wrong, but for me that just bores me, I prefer things to be left more to my imagination... and it's really a 'time' thing, coz portuguese authors from the same time (I'm portuguese btw) are also extremely descriptive, and apart from the times when I had to read them for school, I never wanted to pick them up again...
Can somebody let some adjectivores lose on those books? Preferably in the main library? ;)
Posted by: Dave Graham (---.addleshaw-booth.co.uk)
Date: August 19, 2002 04:47PM
<HTML>Can you get different types of Adjectivore?
What I'd like is an Adjectivore that would change the adjective to something similar - I recall one set of sci-fi novels in particular - The Gap Sequence by some chap whose name escapes me, in which the word 'howl' was used at least once a chapter.
<HTML>lol I think the thesaurivore would completely transform the book into a different one.... just imagine... every word replaced by a sinonimous (sp?) one.... whoa.... GREAT :D
I got the pic when I bought my copy of The Eyre Affair, it was inside, and I only noticed it (and that it was a signed copy lol) when I got home! Lucky me, I guess...
Does this forum accept scans? I could try and do one and post it...</HTML>
<HTML>i think the guy you were thinking of was called stephen donaldson and yes i do agree he does tend to go a bit over the top. Although I would also suggest that these strange creatures would be much better placed in Paradise Lost where the word as followed by a simile of some kind turns up at least once a page. and by the way i do agree with granny Next that if you read that along with a couple of other novels it can be dangerous for you health. One reading of Paradise lost and my head was spinning.</HTML>
Posted by: Dave Graham (---.addleshaw-booth.co.uk)
Date: August 20, 2002 09:20AM
<HTML>Ah, Stephen Donaldson, that's the chap. Don't get me wrong, it was a cracking good read, could just have done without all the howling... ;-) It was one of those things that once you've noticed it, you can't miss it. Bit like the Stormtrooper banging his head in Star Wars - once you've seen it you can't avoid looking out for it, no matter how hard you try.
Or is that just me? Gulp.
Have you ever read any L Ron Hubbard? Thinking of the Mission:Earth series in particular - I did a count of exclamation marks and there were 37 on one page alone. I think he was on some kind of commission per punctuation mark....
I'll keep an eye out for Paradise Lost. Don't want to jump into it by accident...</HTML>