I find this very interesting. My model of most LWers doesn’t like Murakami very much. I read Kafka on the Shore for an English class, and it was OK, but I wouldn’t exactly say it was in line with much of LW philosophically.
I haven’t read HPMoR before, so I’m genuinely curious about your reasons for disliking it. I would appreciate it if you could enlighten me—I usually seek out critical reviews before I read favourable ones.
First, I don’t think highly of the original story, and I imagine this predisposed me to not liking fanfiction based on it.
While I enjoy EY’s other fiction—in particular, Three Worlds Collide, and the short beisutsukai stuff—HPMoR doesn’t have the same punch. It’s a bit like Atlas Shrugged in that he tries to sum up the entirety of LW philosophy in fictional form, and the result is a text that drags on and on with little thematic unity. I enjoyed parts of the Ender’s Game chapters, for instance, because they were more or less on topic the whole time.
All in all, I would rather reread “Shinji and Warhammer 40k”, “To the Stars”, or other really good fanfiction than bother rereading HPMoR.
I find this very interesting. My model of most LWers doesn’t like Murakami very much. I read Kafka on the Shore for an English class, and it was OK, but I wouldn’t exactly say it was in line with much of LW philosophically.
I’ve read some of his short stories and thought they were meh. They had a few interesting points, but didn’t really connect.
Meh. I don’t particularly care what LWers in general like. They have the poor taste to tend to enjoy HPMoR.
I haven’t read HPMoR before, so I’m genuinely curious about your reasons for disliking it. I would appreciate it if you could enlighten me—I usually seek out critical reviews before I read favourable ones.
First, I don’t think highly of the original story, and I imagine this predisposed me to not liking fanfiction based on it.
While I enjoy EY’s other fiction—in particular, Three Worlds Collide, and the short beisutsukai stuff—HPMoR doesn’t have the same punch. It’s a bit like Atlas Shrugged in that he tries to sum up the entirety of LW philosophy in fictional form, and the result is a text that drags on and on with little thematic unity. I enjoyed parts of the Ender’s Game chapters, for instance, because they were more or less on topic the whole time.
All in all, I would rather reread “Shinji and Warhammer 40k”, “To the Stars”, or other really good fanfiction than bother rereading HPMoR.