An afternoon in Amsterdam
Aug. 10th, 2008 02:06 pmI just dyed my hair again and am waiting for it to dry...
I went to Amsterdam yesterday, because I wanted to see The Dark Knight in a proper cinema and I still had some books to buy that I hadn't found in London.
I wanted to buy Aidan Chambers Dance On My Grave (I've read it in Dutch and loved it), but it seems to only be available online. Amazon.co.uk, here I come;)
I did buy Gödel Escher Bach by Douglas R. Hofstadter. Brotherdearest made me read that years ago and after Metamagical Themas nearly killed me -in a good way-, I really wanted my own copies of his books. Sadly the latter was not available, but I'm very happy to put GEB on my shelf:)
I also bought Germain Greer's debut The Female Eunuch, which I had wanted to read ever since I read The Whole Woman. I found her art-historybook The Boy last week in a second hand store and that reminded me of her first book on feminism. I can't wait to finally read it.
And I found two follow-up booklets to His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman: Lyra's Oxford and Once Upon A Time In The North. I'm a sucker for series and like my universes complete:) I finished the last of the three main books this morning (The Golden Compass - The Subtle Knife - The Amber Spyglass). I'm still not sure if I should watch the movie, even though I've grown to love the characters: I fear the film might focus more on the action than the concept. I liked the story very much, but fantasy is still not my genre. I will write a more extensive review in the future and explain why I was lured in despite my apprehension while reading the first book.
Oh, my hair is dry. Let's check the damage. *runs off to mirror*
I went to Amsterdam yesterday, because I wanted to see The Dark Knight in a proper cinema and I still had some books to buy that I hadn't found in London.
I wanted to buy Aidan Chambers Dance On My Grave (I've read it in Dutch and loved it), but it seems to only be available online. Amazon.co.uk, here I come;)
I did buy Gödel Escher Bach by Douglas R. Hofstadter. Brotherdearest made me read that years ago and after Metamagical Themas nearly killed me -in a good way-, I really wanted my own copies of his books. Sadly the latter was not available, but I'm very happy to put GEB on my shelf:)
I also bought Germain Greer's debut The Female Eunuch, which I had wanted to read ever since I read The Whole Woman. I found her art-historybook The Boy last week in a second hand store and that reminded me of her first book on feminism. I can't wait to finally read it.
And I found two follow-up booklets to His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman: Lyra's Oxford and Once Upon A Time In The North. I'm a sucker for series and like my universes complete:) I finished the last of the three main books this morning (The Golden Compass - The Subtle Knife - The Amber Spyglass). I'm still not sure if I should watch the movie, even though I've grown to love the characters: I fear the film might focus more on the action than the concept. I liked the story very much, but fantasy is still not my genre. I will write a more extensive review in the future and explain why I was lured in despite my apprehension while reading the first book.
Oh, my hair is dry. Let's check the damage. *runs off to mirror*
no subject
Date: 2008-08-12 12:26 pm (UTC)I ordered Lyra's oxford, but it never turned up. Am still waiting on my refund. I want to make sure to get the hardcover so it matches OUATITN.
no subject
Date: 2008-08-12 08:51 pm (UTC)I did get extremely excited from a lot of the action scenes, the fights were my favorite bits in every book.
I didn't see a hardcover edition of Lyra's Oxford. If it had been available I probably would have gone for it, even though my Dark Materials books are paperbacks (but they are shiny!)