Posts Tagged ‘short stories’

Saw the Movie? Read the Book!

Wednesday, May 1st, 2013

These May movies are based on books:

Jurassic Park 3D (the 3D release of the 1993 box office smash hit)

is still based on the novel Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton (iconic cover by the amazing Chip Kidd).

Hannah Arendt is a biographical film about the German Jewish philosopher. It isn’t based on any specific book,

but there are quite a few books about her, the times she lived in and her work, like The Portable Hannah Arendt.

Two Mothers is based on the short story The Grandmothers by Nobel Prize winner Doris Lessing.

The Great Gatsby is based on the classic written by F. Scott Fitzgerald.  If you haven’t read it yet, do!  Glorious use of language.  :-)

The Company You Keep is based on the novel with the same title by Neil Gordon.

L’Ecume des Jours is based on the French novel with the same title by Boris Vian.

It has been translated to English with the title Froth on the Daydream.

Epic is based on the novel The Leaf Men and the Brave Good Bugs by William Joyce

(the same man who also wrote The Rise of the Guardians books).

Midnight’s Children is based on the modern classic by Salman Rushdie (originally scheduled for March).

Writers on Demand: Katcon winners

Tuesday, November 27th, 2012

ABC attended Katcon at Katwijk aan Zee earlier this year and was one of the sponsors for the short story competition. The top five winners were awarded a € 25 ABC Gift Certificate which could be used to publish and print their short story on our Espresso Book Machines. Four of the five winners decided to combine their efforts into one book – Quatrofantasto.

The winners, Stephen Vroom, Corina Onderstijn, Richard Schothans and Marieke Frankema, designed and edited the book and the ABC printed a copy for each of them. They were also able to order copies for friends and family.

ABC was extremely happy with the result and will also be a proud sponsor of Fantastels 2012.

- Joe


Bookbits for November 7th, 2012

Wednesday, November 7th, 2012
  • And finally: amazing tattoos inspired by amazing children’s books (via flavorwire):

Have tips for the Bookbits? Mail blog@abc.nl!

Bookbits for July 10th, 2012

Tuesday, July 10th, 2012
  • R. I. P. Dutch poet and writer Gerrit Komrij, first Poet Laureate of the Netherlands, died last week aged 68.  Obituaries here and here (both in Dutch).

Staff Review: Wool Omnibus by Hugh Howey

Tuesday, June 5th, 2012

In July 2011 Hugh Howey released a short post-apocalyptic SF-story called Wool as a download on Amazon. It was well reviewed and sold well, so he wrote a few sequels, which also became quite popular. Now the first 5 stories are available in print as The Wool Omnibus, and here’s the thing: it’s completely self-published. Most self-published books are unreadable hokum, or vanity projects only interesting to the author and (maybe) his friends and family or simply the ravings of a mad person, but Wool – even though it hasn’t been professionally edited or approved or groomed by a publisher – is pretty good. There’s a lot of room for improvement, but by and large it’s better than a lot of other stuff on the shelves of our bookstore.

It’s hard to go into the story without giving too much away, but here’s the gist of it: there’s a community of people living inside a huge 150-floor underground silo, which they can’t leave because the air outside is toxic. Anyone who does express a desire to go outside gets his or her wish: they are sentenced to spend the last few minutes of their lives – before their hazard suit succumbs to the toxins in the air and dissolves – cleaning the outside sensors of the silo, so the people inside get a clear picture on their monitors again.

The premise of the original short story is of course that someone has to go outside and do a little cleaning. Will he survive? I ain’t telling. The first story is fun, a bit high on drama but I guess that if you only have a couple of thousand words to get a reader engrossed in your narrative, you have to lay it on pretty thick.

The problem is that in stories 2-5 – all direct sequels to each other – he slows down the pace but doesn’t let up the drama. Every important character seems to have lost someone in the past, or is about to lose someone, and I got the impression that this is the only way Howey thinks it’s possible to get the reader to invest in the characters. He certainly doesn’t give them many other characteristics.

But even though the characters lack depth, the world Howey creates is very interesting. After the first story he takes his time to explore the rest of the silo, and of course everything is not completely as it seems. He creates a very convincing living, breathing underground community, and the slow descent the protagonists of the second short story make to the very last floor really feels like an exploration of strange new lands, which in a way it also is to them. When the only way to go up or down is climbing long, winding stairs, people tend to stick to their own floors.

About three quarters through the omnibus Howey runs out of world to explore, and the shallow characters are barely enough to keep to keep the reader interested from that point on, but his concise writing still doesn’t make it a chore to finish the book.

Howey is still expanding the Wool-series, but I have a feeling after part 5 it’s pretty much played out and am more interested in several of his other projects, which I hope will also be available in print in the future. Still, I heartily recommend the Wool Omnibus, it’s one of the few books of which I finished the first half in one sitting. It’s an especially good read for fans of the Fallout-games and other post-apocalyptica.

Reviewed by JeroenW