Title: Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them: The Original Screenplay
Author: J. K. Rowling [Website] aka Joanne Rowling aka Robert Galbraith [Website] ; Illustrated by MinaLima [Website] aka Miraphora Mina [IMDb] and Eduardo Lima [IMDb]
Publisher: Arthur A. Levine Books
Series: Fantastic Beasts, Bk 1 (spinoff of the Harry Potter series)
ISBN: 9781338109061
Length: 284 pages + "Glossary of Film Terms" + Cast & Crew"
Obtained: Library copy
Why this book?:
Of course I had to read this.
Comments:
I really enjoyed the Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them movie. At the time of watching it, I had a hold on the screen play but was still waiting for my place in the queue.
When I finally started reading, I was astounded. I've always read books then watched movies, and there were always differences. But as the screenplay this is the exact dialogue in the exact order and with all the descriptions. I had vivid images of what had been portrayed on screen popping up as I read. My imagination just isn't that good. And I was able to see names I had missed while watching or understand a couple parts that I may have missed the significance of while watching. I was also able to catch the parts I had missed with restroom breaks for myself and the kiddos.
The only drawback is, I REALLY wish I could see it again now. I don't know. Maybe I will.
Anyway, I gather the movie is part of a series, so I'm hoping for the same in regards to published screenplays.
Showing posts with label Joanne Rowling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joanne Rowling. Show all posts
Monday, December 12, 2016
Friday, September 9, 2016
Fantastic Beasts & Where to Find Them AND Quidditch Through the Ages
Title: Fantastic Beasts & Where to Find Them
Author: Newt Scamander ; J. K. Rowling [Website] aka Joanne Rowling aka Robert Galbraith [Website]
Publisher: Arthur A. Levine Books ; Obscurus Books
ISBN: 0439321603
Length: 42 pages
Part of a box set released through the U.K. Comic Relief
Title: Quidditch Through the Ages
Author: Kennilworthy Whisp ; J. K. Rowling [Website] aka Joanne Rowling aka Robert Galbraith [Website]
Author: Newt Scamander ; J. K. Rowling [Website] aka Joanne Rowling aka Robert Galbraith [Website]
Publisher: Arthur A. Levine Books ; Obscurus Books
ISBN: 0439321603
Length: 42 pages
Part of a box set released through the U.K. Comic Relief
Title: Quidditch Through the Ages
Author: Kennilworthy Whisp ; J. K. Rowling [Website] aka Joanne Rowling aka Robert Galbraith [Website]
Publisher: Arthur A. Levine Books ; WhizzHard Books
ISBN: 0439321611
Length: 56 pages
Part of a box set released through the U.K. Comic Relief
Why these books?:
I - ahem - read both of these for the Summer Reading program (Red Cover and Sports Book). They are certainly for all ages, correct?
Plus I wanted to read Fantastic Beasts & Where to Find Them before the movie and screenplay.
Comments:
I had held off reading these all these years because I was uncertain of what I'd find. They were both quick and interesting reads.
Fantastic Beasts & Where to Find Them is a copy of Harry Potter's textbook, so every time there was a notation, I was mentally trying to place when on the timeline it might be referring to.
Quidditch Through the Ages is more of a history (a copy of the Hogwarts Library copy). I found myself most interested in the part about the various teams from around the world. It was especially timely reading after the watching some of the Olympics.
Wednesday, September 7, 2016
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child: Parts One and Two
Title: Harry Potter and the Cursed Child: Parts One and Two
Author: J. K. Rowling [Website][Harry Potter the Play Website][IMDb] aka Joanne Rowling aka Robert Galbraith and John Tiffany [Harry Potter the Play Website][IMDb][Playbill] and Jack Thomas [Harry Potter the Play Website][IMDb]
Publisher: Arthur A. Levine Books
Series: Harry Potter, Bk 8 (or a Harry Potter spinoff)
ISBN: 9781338099133
Length: 308 pages + "About the Production" ; 2 Parts, 4 Acts
Obtained: Library copy
Why this book?:
Hello. Harry Potter. But I was also able to use it as a format I don't usually read for the Summer Reading Bingo.
Comments:
It's been awhile, so I don't remember all the details of the original Harry Potter books. The format took some adjusting, but after the first bit where it's glossing over years of events, I settled in. Much of the story touches on the gloom that can be "real life" where bad things happen, where people don't always understand each other, where prejudices still exist, and where your "good guys" and "bad guys" aren't always so clear cut. And it had a bit of the butterfly effect going on (not my favorite theme, but I guess it suited the story).
I haven't read any reviews (I've been rather scared to), so I don't know if people generally liked it or not. It sounds, from the quick bits I've heard IRL, like there have been mixed feelings. On the one hand, I was okay with the way it ended in book 7. On the other hand, I had no objection to discovering Rowling's tale of Albus's life (so very different than imagination might have had it). Overall, I enjoyed it.
Author: J. K. Rowling [Website][Harry Potter the Play Website][IMDb] aka Joanne Rowling aka Robert Galbraith and John Tiffany [Harry Potter the Play Website][IMDb][Playbill] and Jack Thomas [Harry Potter the Play Website][IMDb]
Publisher: Arthur A. Levine Books
Series: Harry Potter, Bk 8 (or a Harry Potter spinoff)
ISBN: 9781338099133
Length: 308 pages + "About the Production" ; 2 Parts, 4 Acts
Obtained: Library copy
Why this book?:
Hello. Harry Potter. But I was also able to use it as a format I don't usually read for the Summer Reading Bingo.
Comments:
It's been awhile, so I don't remember all the details of the original Harry Potter books. The format took some adjusting, but after the first bit where it's glossing over years of events, I settled in. Much of the story touches on the gloom that can be "real life" where bad things happen, where people don't always understand each other, where prejudices still exist, and where your "good guys" and "bad guys" aren't always so clear cut. And it had a bit of the butterfly effect going on (not my favorite theme, but I guess it suited the story).
I haven't read any reviews (I've been rather scared to), so I don't know if people generally liked it or not. It sounds, from the quick bits I've heard IRL, like there have been mixed feelings. On the one hand, I was okay with the way it ended in book 7. On the other hand, I had no objection to discovering Rowling's tale of Albus's life (so very different than imagination might have had it). Overall, I enjoyed it.
Friday, July 8, 2016
Career of Evil
Title: Career of Evil
Author: Robert Galbraith [Website] aka J. K. Rowling [Website] aka Joanne Rowling ; Read by Robert Glenister [IMDb]
Publisher: Hachette Audio
Series: Cormoran Strike, Bk 3
ISBN: 9781478962663
Length: 15 discs ; 17 hours
Obtained: Library copy
Why this book?:
I've been enjoying the series.
Comments:
Robin's getting married. Or is she? I can't say this was my favorite thread of the storyline, but it was certainly part of it. We also learn more about her past, which adds to her character, but makes quite the contrast from when she is being strong and overcoming vs. when she feels weak and is losing herself to the horror in her life.
And then there were the men who could potentially be out for Strike. They had all done horrible things, particularly to women. I'm sure the title can be taken multiple ways, but whenever I reflected on it I thought of how Cormoran Strike's career had brought him into contact with such evil.
Anyway, this one book me a while to get through, but certainly picked up quite a bit toward the end. There was one scene in particular that had me in knots. The adrenaline and nerves were so strong I found myself thinking I probably shouldn't have been driving.
Author: Robert Galbraith [Website] aka J. K. Rowling [Website] aka Joanne Rowling ; Read by Robert Glenister [IMDb]
Publisher: Hachette Audio
Series: Cormoran Strike, Bk 3
ISBN: 9781478962663
Length: 15 discs ; 17 hours
Obtained: Library copy
Why this book?:
I've been enjoying the series.
Comments:
Robin's getting married. Or is she? I can't say this was my favorite thread of the storyline, but it was certainly part of it. We also learn more about her past, which adds to her character, but makes quite the contrast from when she is being strong and overcoming vs. when she feels weak and is losing herself to the horror in her life.
And then there were the men who could potentially be out for Strike. They had all done horrible things, particularly to women. I'm sure the title can be taken multiple ways, but whenever I reflected on it I thought of how Cormoran Strike's career had brought him into contact with such evil.
Anyway, this one book me a while to get through, but certainly picked up quite a bit toward the end. There was one scene in particular that had me in knots. The adrenaline and nerves were so strong I found myself thinking I probably shouldn't have been driving.
Tuesday, September 23, 2014
The Silkworm
Title: The Silkworm
Author: Robert Galbraith [Website] aka J. K. Rowling [Website] aka Joanne Rowling ; Read by Robert Glenister [IMDb]
Publisher: Hachette Audio / Mulholland Books
Series: Cormoran Strike, Bk 2
ISBN: 9781478980902
Length: 14 discs ; 17.5 hours
Obtained: Library copy
Why this book?:
I read and enjoyed the first. I wanted more of Cormoran and Robin.
Comments:
So I switched to audio format for this one. It's not something I usually do, but the downloadable audio was the first available. Then it expired before I finished. I tried to read the print book (which came next), but now that I had started it in audio, I needed to finish it that way. By the time the Audio CD version came to me I didn't remember where I had left off. I skimmed (listened here and there) my way through discs 4 - 11 before I found where I had actually left off. In other words, my reading experience was a bit different.
Anyway, in this book Strike is still getting semi-regular business from the commotion the Lula Landry case created (see The Cuckoo's Calling). But he's not really interested in it until Leonora Quine comes in wanting him to find her husband. This brings him into the publishing world. And what a crazy view of the publishing world it is... I hope it's as fictional as the murder mystery.
Robin is still tweaking her role in Strike's firm. Which is fine as long as it goes the way I want it to. Which is her being an irreplaceable part of his business. Though I have to say, both Strike and Robin need to work on their communication skills. I feel a little silly for speaking of them as if they are real, but that's the sign of good characters, right?
Great characters, fine mystery... I look forward to book 3, and am so excited to know more are expected. Now I just have to figure out if I'm going back to print or sticking with audio. Speaking of which, the narrator did a great job with the many characters.
Author: Robert Galbraith [Website] aka J. K. Rowling [Website] aka Joanne Rowling ; Read by Robert Glenister [IMDb]
Publisher: Hachette Audio / Mulholland Books
Series: Cormoran Strike, Bk 2
ISBN: 9781478980902
Length: 14 discs ; 17.5 hours
Obtained: Library copy
Why this book?:
I read and enjoyed the first. I wanted more of Cormoran and Robin.
Comments:
So I switched to audio format for this one. It's not something I usually do, but the downloadable audio was the first available. Then it expired before I finished. I tried to read the print book (which came next), but now that I had started it in audio, I needed to finish it that way. By the time the Audio CD version came to me I didn't remember where I had left off. I skimmed (listened here and there) my way through discs 4 - 11 before I found where I had actually left off. In other words, my reading experience was a bit different.
Anyway, in this book Strike is still getting semi-regular business from the commotion the Lula Landry case created (see The Cuckoo's Calling). But he's not really interested in it until Leonora Quine comes in wanting him to find her husband. This brings him into the publishing world. And what a crazy view of the publishing world it is... I hope it's as fictional as the murder mystery.
Robin is still tweaking her role in Strike's firm. Which is fine as long as it goes the way I want it to. Which is her being an irreplaceable part of his business. Though I have to say, both Strike and Robin need to work on their communication skills. I feel a little silly for speaking of them as if they are real, but that's the sign of good characters, right?
Great characters, fine mystery... I look forward to book 3, and am so excited to know more are expected. Now I just have to figure out if I'm going back to print or sticking with audio. Speaking of which, the narrator did a great job with the many characters.
Monday, May 19, 2014
The Cuckoo's Calling
Title: The Cuckoo's Calling
Author: Robert Galbraith [Website] aka J. K. Rowling [Website] aka Joanne Rowling
Publisher: Mulholland Books
Series: Cormoran Strike, Bk 1
ISBN: 9780316206846
Obtained: Library copy
Why this book?:
Um.. I heard the fuss about the exposed author. I was eager to read a mystery by said author. Plus the reviews (in print) were positive and it sounded like a story I'd enjoy. As for why now, I had finally checked it out, and finally grabbed it off the bookshelf.
Comments:
Cormoran Strike is a private investigator - not a very successful one (people just don't want to pay their bills - especially for answers they don't like!). Robin is his new temporary assistant. Both of them are great characters. I wish I was as organized as Robin and as thorough as Cormoran (I try to be, but wow).
Anyway, I've been reading quite a few cozy mysteries lately. As much as I love them, the amateur sleuths do tend to jump to conclusions quite a bit. Cormoran, on the other hand, worked on collecting all the details and perspectives in a very methodical way. He made his deductions based on the full information ha had available and not until he had all the pieces. I greatly appreciated the change in pace (perhaps I should read more PI mystery books).
Cormoran has a mess of his personal life, and while that was somewhat of a distraction, it didn't overwhelm the story. I so appreciated that.
I was also pleased (though not surprised) with how the story ended, and I look forward to reading the next book in the series, The Silkworm (due out this June 2014).
Author: Robert Galbraith [Website] aka J. K. Rowling [Website] aka Joanne Rowling
Publisher: Mulholland Books
Series: Cormoran Strike, Bk 1
ISBN: 9780316206846
Obtained: Library copy
Why this book?:
Um.. I heard the fuss about the exposed author. I was eager to read a mystery by said author. Plus the reviews (in print) were positive and it sounded like a story I'd enjoy. As for why now, I had finally checked it out, and finally grabbed it off the bookshelf.
Comments:
Cormoran Strike is a private investigator - not a very successful one (people just don't want to pay their bills - especially for answers they don't like!). Robin is his new temporary assistant. Both of them are great characters. I wish I was as organized as Robin and as thorough as Cormoran (I try to be, but wow).
Anyway, I've been reading quite a few cozy mysteries lately. As much as I love them, the amateur sleuths do tend to jump to conclusions quite a bit. Cormoran, on the other hand, worked on collecting all the details and perspectives in a very methodical way. He made his deductions based on the full information ha had available and not until he had all the pieces. I greatly appreciated the change in pace (perhaps I should read more PI mystery books).
Cormoran has a mess of his personal life, and while that was somewhat of a distraction, it didn't overwhelm the story. I so appreciated that.
I was also pleased (though not surprised) with how the story ended, and I look forward to reading the next book in the series, The Silkworm (due out this June 2014).
Labels:
J.K. Rowling,
Joanne Rowling,
Mystery,
Reviews,
Robert Galbraith
Monday, February 18, 2013
The Casual Vacancy
Title: The Casual Vacancy
Author: J.K. Rowling aka Joanne "Jo" Rowling; Read by Tom Hollander (link to IMDB)
Publisher: Hachette Audio
ISBN: 9781619695009
Length: 15 discs; 18 hours
Obtained: Library copy
Comments:
Oh, what to say about this one. I wanted to read it because it's J.K. Rowling, of course. Not because I thought it'd be Harry Potter or like Harry Potter - I didn't. But how can I say she's a favorite author if I've only read the one series and never tried anything else by her? I decided on trying it in audio format because, from what I knew of it (not much, btw), it seemed like it should suit that format well.
It's a lengthy book, made more so when in audio format, so it took me awhile to read it. I started it in November and had it out for 2 weeks, but I could not renew it because others had it on hold. I didn't start back up again until this January, leaving a large pause in the middle for me to forget details as well as forget the crispness of the emotions portrayed in the book.
But perhaps you're waiting to hear what I thought of the book itself?
You may or may not know that I'm not a huge fan of description. I mean, obviously some description is necessary, but too much of it makes my head swim. I become bored and lose focus and this is especially troublesome in audio books. The Casual Vacancy includes much description. The local politics and the many characters (and there are many, many characters) need to be introduced. And Rowling goes into such depth with each character; the reader is aware of all the deep dark secrets a person might have.
Which brings me to the other reason I didn't love this book. I've said it before, and I'll say it again, I read to escape reality. I rarely read "literature" or general fiction, really, because for some reason literature goes hand and hand with the problems of humanity. The Casual Vacancy is positively seeped in realism. Everything from the cons, the abusers, the drug-users and alcoholics, the proud (i.e. haughty), the teen looking at porn or becoming sexually active, the abused and the abuser, the teen who is cutting and has suicidal ideology, the wife who is unhappy in her marriage and dreams of a younger man (dreams that include a younger version of herself), the mentally ill (you may recall my father is mentally ill, so this was familiar though different), those who are raped (I despise rape scenes. They literally make me sick.) ... I can go on and on. You see all of that in this book. But rare are the happy lives. If they exist, then those characters aren't made available to the reader.
Part of both the description and the detailed character portrayal elements that I, personally, wasn't fond of is how graphic everything was. The language, the "sex" elements, pretty much everything that could be graphic was. I prefer things glossed over.
Anyway, when I restarted the book I hoped things would get better. I was resigned to the gloom, and was left simply hoping that by the end at least some of the characters would find some contentment - some peace. Not to spoil things too much (if I haven't already), but only a few characters (of the many) ended up with at least the potential for contentment (though not really the peace or happiness itself that I had hoped for).
All of that being said, I can't deny that the writing was great, Rowling did an excellent job of getting into the characters heads. And the story is one that makes you think about it after it's over.
Would I read another adult book by Rowling? Probably. Would I be a bit more cautious when doing so? Absolutely.
And to follow up with a brief reading by the author as well as part of an interview... (In which Rowling says it's a humorous book - dark humor. That's not quite how I saw it... interesting, how perspective works.)
Author: J.K. Rowling aka Joanne "Jo" Rowling; Read by Tom Hollander (link to IMDB)
Publisher: Hachette Audio
ISBN: 9781619695009
Length: 15 discs; 18 hours
Obtained: Library copy
Comments:
Oh, what to say about this one. I wanted to read it because it's J.K. Rowling, of course. Not because I thought it'd be Harry Potter or like Harry Potter - I didn't. But how can I say she's a favorite author if I've only read the one series and never tried anything else by her? I decided on trying it in audio format because, from what I knew of it (not much, btw), it seemed like it should suit that format well.
It's a lengthy book, made more so when in audio format, so it took me awhile to read it. I started it in November and had it out for 2 weeks, but I could not renew it because others had it on hold. I didn't start back up again until this January, leaving a large pause in the middle for me to forget details as well as forget the crispness of the emotions portrayed in the book.
But perhaps you're waiting to hear what I thought of the book itself?
You may or may not know that I'm not a huge fan of description. I mean, obviously some description is necessary, but too much of it makes my head swim. I become bored and lose focus and this is especially troublesome in audio books. The Casual Vacancy includes much description. The local politics and the many characters (and there are many, many characters) need to be introduced. And Rowling goes into such depth with each character; the reader is aware of all the deep dark secrets a person might have.
Which brings me to the other reason I didn't love this book. I've said it before, and I'll say it again, I read to escape reality. I rarely read "literature" or general fiction, really, because for some reason literature goes hand and hand with the problems of humanity. The Casual Vacancy is positively seeped in realism. Everything from the cons, the abusers, the drug-users and alcoholics, the proud (i.e. haughty), the teen looking at porn or becoming sexually active, the abused and the abuser, the teen who is cutting and has suicidal ideology, the wife who is unhappy in her marriage and dreams of a younger man (dreams that include a younger version of herself), the mentally ill (you may recall my father is mentally ill, so this was familiar though different), those who are raped (I despise rape scenes. They literally make me sick.) ... I can go on and on. You see all of that in this book. But rare are the happy lives. If they exist, then those characters aren't made available to the reader.
Part of both the description and the detailed character portrayal elements that I, personally, wasn't fond of is how graphic everything was. The language, the "sex" elements, pretty much everything that could be graphic was. I prefer things glossed over.
Anyway, when I restarted the book I hoped things would get better. I was resigned to the gloom, and was left simply hoping that by the end at least some of the characters would find some contentment - some peace. Not to spoil things too much (if I haven't already), but only a few characters (of the many) ended up with at least the potential for contentment (though not really the peace or happiness itself that I had hoped for).
All of that being said, I can't deny that the writing was great, Rowling did an excellent job of getting into the characters heads. And the story is one that makes you think about it after it's over.
Would I read another adult book by Rowling? Probably. Would I be a bit more cautious when doing so? Absolutely.
And to follow up with a brief reading by the author as well as part of an interview... (In which Rowling says it's a humorous book - dark humor. That's not quite how I saw it... interesting, how perspective works.)
Labels:
Audiobook,
General Fiction,
J.K. Rowling,
Joanne Rowling,
Reviews,
Tom Hollander
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