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Bricks in Motion
We are a friendly filmmaking community devoted to the art of stop-motion animation using LEGO® and similar construction toys. Here, you can share your work, join our community of other brickfilmers, and participate in periodic animation contests!
A place to discuss, share, and create stop motion films.
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I've read the following Michael Morpurgo books and never wanted them to end
Oh weird, I remember reading Kensuke's Kingdom a while ago. There actually were some Japanese soldiers who were in the Pacific for decades after the war ended.
Reading this:

The last book I read was Scott Pilgrim Vol. 6.
I highly recommend the series for any geeks out there.
Rumors of Another World: What on Earth Are We Missing? by Phillip Yancey
Yancey brings an intimacy to discussions of faith by relating his own struggles with the subject and brings his past as a journalist into play with an extensive citing of literary, anecdotal, and scholarly sources. I found this book both thoughtful and challenging.
Got some borders gift cards for christmas, looking forward to reading to the last book in the Hunger Games series and the last three Scott Pilgrim books and a book that my aunt recommended called Boneshaker which i guess is a steampunk zombie apocalypse thing which is always good.
I finished reading Wolf Brother. It's amazing! 5/5
Just bought Scott Pilgrim 4 and 5, a kid took the last copy of #6 as I walked up to the shelf. I also bought Mockingjay, which I'm looking forward too.
Also:

I just want to give a shout-out to Garth Nix. While his books are attended for a younger audience than I, I was really impressed with his Keys to the Kingdoms series and would love to see them adapted to film.
Last couple of books I read that I can remember:
The Stainless Steel Rat's Revenge and The Stainless Steel Rat Saves the world by Harry Harrison.
Mildly enjoyable pulpy sci-fi nonsense about a sexist criminal in a time during which society has forgotten how to deal with thieves. These stories aren't bad, but they're not quite as impressively realized as Harrison's Return To Eden trilogy.
This was the best sentence from either one:
'He aimed the twin cannons of his nose at me and fired a broadside snort that signaled a close to the recently opened conversation.'
Desperation by Stephen King
It started out intriguingly enough, but by the end, the plot and tension had completely s!!! the bed. King sometimes relies too heavily on cliched and stock characters. I wanted to freaking kill the kid, he was so annoyingly perfect and angelic. This book also should've been 200 pages shorter.
Annie On My Mind
I got really depressed while reading parts of this, but it is a masterfully written book.
Psmith In the City - P.G. Wodehouse
Too much cricket as usual, lol, but gatdamn do I love me some Wodehouse. Psmith is one of my favorite literary characters. Sadly, there's only one book left featuring him that I have yet to read.
Gunpowder Empire - Harry Turtledove
Pretty lame. The book's *message* that all cultures are wrapped up in themselves and therefore can't see their own eccentricities was rather clumsily illustrated by the ridiculous extent to which fur nauseated the main characters.
Also, despite this book (which I guess was supposed to be YA) featuring blood and destruction, there wasn't enough conflict. In the end, the Crosstime Traders were able to keep their operation fairly stable without major hassle.
And they seriously go to all this trouble for a bit of gatdamn grain? For a society capable of such impressive technology, you'd think someone could do something about the food/fuel crisis.
And yes, slavery is bad. We get it.
On the comic book tip, I recently bought Hack/Slash: Omnibus Volume 1, which, while beginning slightly clumsily, has been an amusing distraction so far.
The next book I'm going to read: Breakfast of Champions by Kurt Vonnegut. I am excited as all heck, on account of it has a butthole in it. And also because Kurt Vonnegut rules.
I just finished the Hyperion Cantos, which I recommend to absolutely every person on the planet. Hyperion/Fall of Hyperion/Endymion/Rise of Endymion. Some of the best stuff I've ever read. I'm moving on to Dante's Divine Comedy right now which is going to take a long time to get through.
@Shale - Wodehouse and Vonnegut are always the right option. I assume you've read some of the Jeeves novels?
I read so many books, it would be a waste of my time to type them all out.
It would take a thread about 4x the size of Cafe Corner (at 250 pages) to tell you about all the books I have read.
MATT
Cool story, bro.
Blankets - Craig Thompson
Beautiful book. The brushwork flows so brilliantly, I can't even imagine the amount of work that went into making this book a reality. The artwork is just phenomenal. Thompson really takes everything strange and wonderful about winter and puts it onto the page in a way that perfectly compliments the story. Of course, the story isn't shabby either, an autobiography presenting a coming of age story involving love, religion, and life in a rural setting that had some interesting parallels with my own. The author does a good job of displaying himself in a way that readers can relate to themselves, and he has a great ability to celebrate childhood while not forgetting that ultimately it's just a step towards a larger world. While it isn't the best book I've ever read, the artwork alone makes it worth owning. I would definitely recommend it.
Mother, Come Home - Paul Hornshemeier
Interesting. Not a feel good novel by any means, but interesting nonetheless. What probably stood out the most to me while reading was the experimental nature of the artwork/writing. With the main theme being grief and how different individuals deal with their feelings, the artwork throughout the novel changes, at points becoming flat and simplistic like a child's drawing, sometimes becoming abstract (particularly the introduction, which is incredibly surreal and takes some time to understand). The panel layouts are equally innovative, but never to the point you wouldn't know how to read the book, which is nice. I liked it, on the whole, but I won't claim I understood everything. Some of the plot seems a little uninspired and predictable, but the underlying ideas behind it stopped the writing from being wholly flat as a result. I was surprised to see that the author grew up a few miles away from my hometown.
I have five days to get through Crime and Punishment for a class, which shouldn't be terribly hard. 90 pages a day, and it's a really good read.
Reading 'The Complete Works of Edgar Allen Poe'. The detective murder mysteries can make me lose concentration, but his more famous works are excellent reads (which is why they are famous).
Ham On Rye
Really Good Bukowski book.
Pulp
It's good to see something else from Bukowski. It was really bizarre and funny.
Maximum Bob
Still reading this. Really good Elmore Leonard book so far. The style, dialogue and characters are great.
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