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1374 lines
69 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 775
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Title: HPR0775: HPR AudioBookClub Shadowmagic
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0775/hpr0775.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 02:18:08
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---
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The following program contains several mild explosives, all beginning with HD or A.
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It also contains reviews of alcohol beverages.
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Please use your own discretion in determining whether it's appropriate for family or work
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listening.
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Thank you very much and enjoy the show.
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Due to scheduling conflicts and differences in time zones, Ken Fallon was not actually
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able to join us for the recording of the show.
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However, we believe that he has some valuable insights unique to an Irishman that we'd
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like to include here in the show.
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At the time of the recording, we didn't have any idea of what Ken was going to say here,
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so we don't comment on it in any way or even take it into consideration because he recorded
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this segment after we recorded the show.
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I think you'll agree that the show would have been even better had Ken been on there with
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us, so I'm going to put his content at the beginning and then we're going to go
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to the show.
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Hi everybody, this is Ken calling in a quick review of ShadowMagic, this month's book review
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on HPR's book club.
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I really enjoyed this book from start to finish once it started.
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As the guy says, once it says ShadowMagic, you're into the book straight away transported
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to Chernanok and the story as it goes on.
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It's a very safe story aimed at teenagers, I guess.
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It's nice to see this setting used as a backdrop to an exciting story.
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If any of you are familiar with Celtic mythology, quite a lot of the stories tend to be very
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profound and happy ever after is not a requirement for any of the fables, so as a result, this
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was really nice to be transported to a land.
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I think he really captured the ends of an idea of a place that exists.
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I really loved the music, Luna Sir, the moment I heard it as one of my favourite bands.
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Definitely my favourite trad band, probably number two after Thin Lizzy to be in my favourite
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band.
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Their music is fantastic and excellent, but of course you have to be into traditional
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Irish music, I kind of guess.
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There were one of two points which I'm really hesitant to bring up, but I must say did
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bug me throughout the entire thing.
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The pronunciation of the father's name is incorrect.
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I didn't know what name it was and I downloaded the PDF of the book to find out that the
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spelling was O-I-S-I-F-I-N, and that is pronounced O-sheen.
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It's not pronounced O-O-S-N, it's O-sheen O-sheen.
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If you want to prove the point you can go to www.pranouncenims.com-pranounce and type
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in O-I-S-I-N and it will tell you that it's O-sheen.
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Or you can pick up a phone and dial international 353 and any number and ask them how you pronounce
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that and the answer will be O-sheen.
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So I was one thing that really just hit me throughout the book and took away quite a
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lot of enjoyment outside from that.
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Some of the things, the fact that Karak is a four master chip and a Karak is a type of
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Irish board with a wooden frame and again I checked the PDF to make sure that I'm just
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Nick picking.
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And one other thing that I found kind of odd and I'm going to let him have artistic
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license with this one is the concept of a banshee.
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The banshee is from the Irish word bans which means woman and she means either side which
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is like a fairy mount or she is in house and we were always thought in school that was
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banshee which is a woman who would at funerals and stuff, they would hire old women to
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cry over the person who was died.
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Banshee is a bad word, they would turn up and you would kind of give them some money
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kind of thing.
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But anyway, in every universe that there exists a banshee is female, bans means woman.
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That's it.
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There is no discussion.
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So that whole race.
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And just another thing is there are no leprechauns in there.
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I don't think I ever heard the word leprechaun at all until I started watching American
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TV shows because every reference has been to the fairies which I guess probably mean
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leprechauns but the fairies to me are something different, they're one of the two of the
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dano's or something like that, but only.
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These are all minor little points that obviously nobody else other than me found annoying and
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I'm even reluctant to send them in but hey, I have to do that.
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It is a thing.
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That's it.
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I really am looking forward to the next in the series of this.
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Hopefully this will turn out to be a series I'm very interested to see what will happen.
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With that, I will thank you very much guys for letting me put this in at the last moment.
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And if you want to call in a segment in the US, you can dial it to 063125749 and in the
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UK, you can dial to 034325879.
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Just record, say this is for the book review and we'll follow them on to the book review
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guys and they can add them to the show.
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Without thank you much, I'm back to the guys.
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Hi and welcome to today's episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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We're back with another audio book club and today's book is Shadow Magic.
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I'm Pokey.
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I'm integral.
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I'm Dan.
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Shadow Magic is written by John Blinahan and it's also voiced by the author as well.
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So he reads the book and he writes the book and he picked the people that would play the
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music that he would use for the book.
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So he did three things there, which of course the group that he has for that is Lunissa.
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He's John Blinahan's from Ireland, right?
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I believe so.
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He lives in Ireland.
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I'm not sure if he's from there.
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He doesn't have much of an accent.
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Okay.
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Yeah.
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He doesn't.
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You're right.
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What's the name of his son that he wrote the book for?
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Finn Bar?
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Dad, I do not remember.
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I'm pretty certain that's what it is.
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Shadow Magic is a fantasy novel that has to deal with a family from Tierna Noe, which
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is the mythical Irish land of the fairies.
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Except the family kind of gets separated due to some drama and what not.
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And so you start off the book in the real world with a father who only has one hand and
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is an ancient language professor and a smart mouse on.
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Yeah.
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He's just my kid too.
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I thought it was really cool how all throughout the book, they refer to it as the real
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world.
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Yeah.
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Why do you think he referred to it as the real world versus actually the people in
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Tierna Noe even refer to it as the real world?
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Why did they have a word for it or something similar like Tierna Noe?
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I'm not sure.
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I mean, it was certainly a more mundane place and there's not much else to call it, but
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mundane.
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But from the perspective of the Tierna Noeians, you would think that they're in the real
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world and we're all in the less real world.
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Yeah, exactly.
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That's kind of what I was thinking.
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I don't know.
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See, I look at it and say, looking at Tierna Noe, Tierna Noe is a kind of pseudo finite
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place where the real world is an infinite place because Tierna Noe has specifically
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illustrated boundaries that can expand based upon that ruin stuff.
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But generally has a very fixed set of boundaries that he didn't extend beyond those boundaries
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to say what would exist there.
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But it seemed to be a place that is more finite as opposed to the real world slash universe.
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That's a good point.
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Well, I don't know, simply because the ruined thing, I think it's more infinite than
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our world is.
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They kind of go into the fact that there's still areas that really haven't been explored
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fully yet.
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But that's based upon ruins coming into existence.
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Yeah, when a new ruin is chosen, when someone chooses a new ruin, then a new piece of the
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land rises up from the ocean because Tierna Noe is an island, they said.
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Yeah.
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And also, it's a vehicle to differentiate Tierna Noe and the quote, real world, so the
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reader who's in the quote, real world.
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I think it's really interesting that one of the ways that he describes the difference
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between Tierna Noe and the real world is that the real world in his eyes has like a film
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over it all the time.
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And so everything kind of has a shade of gray.
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It sure does.
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Well, especially compared to Tierna Noe, especially how he describes it.
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I mean, with certain exceptions, a not really horrible thing happens to him sort of.
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Well, that's a common theme used throughout these kind of stories.
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You know, it was done in Narnia and it's done in other fantasy books where the main character
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travels from the quote, real world into the fantasy world.
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And that said, fantasy world is more colorful, more pure, and increases the main character's
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vitality and strength just by the mere presence of its pureness.
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This is a theme that goes all the way back to like middle English writers.
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I've been listening to a podcast called The Tolkien Professor, which I highly recommend.
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And he talks about this all the time that when people passed into the land of fairy things
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change.
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Things are more real.
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Things are more beautiful, more vitality, that kind of thing.
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So it's an old tradition that Lenny Han is carrying on with this, which is pretty cool.
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Is Tierna Noe, is that something he made up or is that actually a mythical fairy land?
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Tierna Noe is an actual mythical fairy land.
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Depending on who you hear about it from, it differs from his interpretation to probably
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every other person in the world's interpretation of the place.
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It was also different when it was written about.
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From what I gathered, the ancient Celts called it Tierna Noe.
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The middle English called it fairy.
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So it's a place that people have been writing about for a long, long time.
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And everyone seems to have a slightly different take on how it works.
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At least one of the Canterbury tales, even, is based in there.
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And a lot of the King Arthur's tales are based in fairy or interactions with fairies,
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which are not necessarily the little winged creatures.
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In fact, they almost never are back then.
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Yeah, they're actually kind of demons back then to an extent, or at least more certainly
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close to like the pup character from mid-Summer Night's Dream.
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Yep, all the characters in mid-Summer Night's Dream were all fairies.
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Puck can overrun in all of them.
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You had mentioned that the author wrote it, voiced it, and chose the music for it.
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One of the things I wanted to say about that, the music in particular.
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I thought the music was fitting.
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I thought the music was good, but I definitely got sick of that music.
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Did you really?
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I loved it.
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Every time I heard it, I loved it.
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Really?
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Well, I started to dislike the music, not because I didn't like it, but because it
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was signifying that like the chapter was over, and so it meant that there was less of
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the book for me to hear.
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There was definitely a Pavlovian response to hear in the music.
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I just got sick of it.
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I did.
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It was the same thing over and over again, that little boo-hoo, whatever, you know.
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It was all right.
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It's just, you know, it's not my favorite kind of music, and I got sick of it because
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it was the same thing every chapter.
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I can understand that, but I love that kind of music.
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I could listen to that all day, but I did actually have a problem with the music.
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I've listened to the book so many times because I've listened to it on my own and with the
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kids, and then again for this show.
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And when I listened to it with the kids, I'm usually listening to it in the car, and over
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the car stereo, that music is literally like ten decibels louder than everything else.
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It's ear splitting when it happens.
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You know, you're right, and maybe that was another part of the reason I didn't like it
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because I did notice that I was going to say that it just, it was very intrusive a lot
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of the times.
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Because that's how we listen to it on a trip.
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Yeah, I noticed that the difference between his audio wavered a lot throughout the book.
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So there were times where you'd actually have to turn him up a little and then turn
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him back down and back up, and then the music would play, and then you'd want to rip your
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ears out because they're exploding.
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I didn't pick up on that so much in his voice, but I picked up on it with the, you know,
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in regards to the music, though, except for actually, you know what, he does kind of,
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he'll kind of talk quite, and then I'll show it to you.
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Let's make a point.
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If that's what you're talking about, then yeah, I can relate to that.
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Yeah, that's kind of what I'm talking about.
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I'm not saying it's the wrong thing for him to have done.
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It's just, I also hate going to a movie where they whisper, and then you can barely hear
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the whisper, and then there's just huge explosion noises all the time everywhere as well.
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I don't know, I really like the audio to be really level the whole time.
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Yeah, I was just going to say I wonder how different it would be if you ran it through
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a compressor first.
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He may have, we don't know his setup.
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Yeah, but you still can.
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Yeah, that's true.
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He called me, he said he was using Windows Vista with Windows Media Player, and the plug-ins
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for that to even it out.
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That's why it didn't work out too well.
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Did he really call you and say that, Dan?
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What do you think?
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No, he didn't.
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I mean, aside from that, I mean, I've really enjoyed the quality of the book, though.
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The music bothered me a little bit, but it wasn't enough to detract from how much I enjoyed
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the book.
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Yeah.
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The one thing he did in a growl that made the book work for you the most, what was it
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that he added back to everything?
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Every time he said the word shadow magic, especially at the beginning of every chapter,
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every track.
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We kind of talked about this earlier today in IRC, and I likened it to being like the
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special lighting effects that you'd get at like a space mountain roller coaster, where
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the ride would be the same without all the strobe lights and special effects lights, but
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the experience would be different.
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When he said shadow magic at the beginning of every recording, it did.
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It set the mood.
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It got you going.
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It got you wound up, and it got you ready to listen for the story.
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It was right after he'd left you with a cliffhanger, so you're dying to hear more of it anyway.
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Yeah.
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It's kind of what I was going to say earlier is, you know, you got to have a low-bian response
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of being sad because the music's playing, but then you get that next track, and it really
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gets you going when he says shadow magic, because he says it was such enthusiasm and such
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a tone that it just echoes through you.
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And then immediately bum's Dan out with the flute music?
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Exactly.
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Yeah.
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Now, I see what you're saying about when he says shadow magic.
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I agree with you on that, and then the flute music, yeah.
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We could have skipped out of my family, but it's all right.
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I listened to another audiobook one time that I had a similar reaction, Dan, and it was
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so bad I went through, like, literally 50 episodes and cut the music out because I couldn't
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bear to listen to it anymore, but I had to finish the story.
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Yeah, I said to my wife I was going to get her to soundtrack for Christmas.
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Well, he tells me which one it is.
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Yeah, if you get her to that soundtrack, Ripney, I'll copy you, yeah.
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We didn't say that.
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She did not enjoy the soundtrack, either.
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I, you know, I think that didn't enjoy it is too harsh.
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It was just, if there was some more variety in there, it would have been that just like
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do, do, do, do, do, do, it just got sick of it.
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It frustrated me because I couldn't whistle along to it.
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It was just too fast for you to whistle with it, wasn't it?
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Just slightly.
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A way too fast for me.
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I guess I should start pop harping on this back and talk about the meat, which was the
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actual story, which was awesome.
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Yeah, the actual story was really good.
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You got to see some character development.
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That's something that's always good to see inside a book.
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I loved the story.
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I thought it was one of the most fun stories I've heard on, on any audio book.
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It was fun.
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It was fun and it was exciting and it kept you going along with it too.
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Yeah, I like the pace of it, but what was your impression of the main character, Connor?
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It depends on what part of the story that you're talking about.
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Because at the beginning, you just want to slap him.
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My impression of Connor was that he could be me, or you, or anybody.
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I liked him, but I got a little sick of his smariness, his sarcasticness after a little
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while, especially towards the end.
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I got tired of the sarcastic feel from him about the time that they're going through
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the U-Lands and he starts talking about the U-Tries.
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I mean, he's in this place, he knows nothing about it, and yet he's making jokes.
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Yeah, like that's chapter four, man.
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I know.
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That wasn't too...
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See, I liked all that.
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I didn't like his jokes.
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I didn't think they were very funny.
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Not most of them, and a couple of were here and there, but it was part of his character
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and had he dropped that from his character, that would have killed it for me.
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It would have made him very one-dimensional.
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Well, I think so too, but at the same time, I think it could have dropped off as he went
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through the book and kind of aged a little more.
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I don't know.
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I just think his first reaction to everything is through his mouth, and I think that was
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just part of his character.
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I have a question, and I don't recall if this was explained.
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But generally speaking, if you go from the fairy land, what's the name of it again, Ternanog?
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Into the real world, and you step on the ground, don't you get trapped in the real world
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forever?
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Or is it that you die?
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And how did they overcome that?
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Okay, what happens is, is if you're from Ternanog, or actually if you're there, and
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then you come here, you instantly age to whatever age you would be from living in Ternanog.
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So if you were 20 here, you went to Ternanog, lived there for 20 years, and then stepped
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on the soil here, you'd turn 40.
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And if you were from there, 40 years old, you only age to like 15, you'd come here,
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you'd age to 40.
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Okay.
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Instantly, which I imagine would be pretty painful to go from like 15 to 40 years old,
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and it totally annihilated that guy in the first chapter he turned to dust and disappeared,
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because he was a couple thousand years old.
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So guess what we take from that is, he was sent over right about the time he was born,
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and his father must have been more than 30, I guess.
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I think reason that his father survived, because he'd lived a couple centuries pretty much.
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The only reason he survived was because of the shadow magic.
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Yeah, it was never fully explained.
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He was definitely at least a thousand years old, because that's how long ago Una was killed
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by Kielt and Kielt and him are only a year apart.
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The only explanation that was given, and it wasn't even an explanation, it's just more
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mystery on top of it, was when they said that he gave up his immortality, which is not
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a fair trade, because anyone who steps into the real world gives up their immortality
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if they stay there.
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So I don't understand how that worked, he didn't explain it yet.
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Well, from my understanding is, as you lose your immortality while you're in the real world,
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because when they go back again, it's kind of like they've got it back again.
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I think the exception of Elisom, who gave it up no matter where he's at.
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Yeah, that's what I mean, and that's the part I don't understand.
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But obviously, he had to have given it up so that he didn't age and die instantly, but
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it never explained how he gave it up or why he didn't get it back.
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Yeah, I'm just going to say magic.
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I agree, it's magic, Dan, that good enough for you?
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Uh-oh, it's magic, Pokey, when I'm with you.
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Ooh, thanks Dan.
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The one thing that I thought was fun, and there's a bunch of little things that, having
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listened to it so many times, I started like picking out little things, like there's
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no snakes in Tiernanogue, but the first thing that happens to him when he gets there's
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a rat crawls across his foot, that was kind of funny.
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Well, you know why there's no snakes in Tiernanogue, right?
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They're too small to swallow the rats.
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They were chased out of there, now correct me if I'm wrong, but that's what Satan Patrick
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stays about, isn't it?
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Yep, it's another snake's out of Ireland.
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I thought that was rats.
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No snakes.
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You're thinking of the Pied Piper.
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I probably am.
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Wow, thanks, that's really cool.
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I'll drink to that so we can do some spoilers.
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Ooh, sounds good to me.
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What are you drinking tonight, Cookie?
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I am drinking Samuel Adams Irish Red of the Brew Master's collection.
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I got it in a variety pack, and it is fantastic, and because it's Irish Red, I thought it
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was also fitting.
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I would say so.
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What's your opinion of this beer?
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It's delicious.
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I'm drinking it out of one of my very favorite glasses.
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My wife bought me for my birthday last year, a set of the Samuel Adams glasses, which
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are like specially designed for beer, and they're actually pretty cool, and they're tasty.
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They keep it cold just a tiny bit longer, but this beer is delicious.
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It's fairly dark amber, would be appropriate, but that's actually darker than amber.
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It's brown, even the head on it is a dark brown.
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It's smooth.
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It's not very sweet, which is cool, because I don't like sweet beers very much, and it's
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got just a slight, slight hint of like a smoky flavor, almost a bacon-y type smoke, but
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not in a bad way, but in a very good way.
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|
It's delicious.
|
|
I highly recommend it.
|
|
Sounds good.
|
|
I'm also on a Samuel Adams beer tonight.
|
|
I decided to go with the, hold on, I have to actually read it from the bottle because I'm
|
|
horribly forgetful, and I can't find it on the bottle.
|
|
Wow.
|
|
I read mine too.
|
|
Here we go.
|
|
Okay, it's the Samuel Adams Noble Pills.
|
|
It's a light pilsner, which typically I am completely against pilsner, so I don't like
|
|
them.
|
|
The buds and cures have just completely destroyed that for me.
|
|
But this one's really decent, because it actually has a decent hops flavor to it, and I guess
|
|
that comes from what they say they use five different hops in it, all five noble hops.
|
|
That's really funny that you're drinking that beer, because I was going to recommend
|
|
that one to you.
|
|
Because I like the hoppy flavor.
|
|
Yeah, it was in the variety pack that my wife bought me, and it was probably my least
|
|
favorite one in the pack, because I'm not a huge hops fan, but you were, and I was going
|
|
to recommend it to you.
|
|
Yeah, I wouldn't say that it goes as far as, you know, being like a pale ale, or even
|
|
just, you know, an ale, but it's still pretty decent.
|
|
It's got enough to wear.
|
|
It makes me happy, but not so much that it's exploding on me or anything like that.
|
|
How about you, Dan?
|
|
What are you on?
|
|
I too am drinking a finely crafted beer, well regarded in Ireland and the rest of the world.
|
|
The classic beachwood aged king of beers, Budweiser.
|
|
I have drank two of these, they go down smooth, and leave you with a nice fermented belly.
|
|
Go USA.
|
|
Dan, that's not an American beer, sorry.
|
|
I know it's not American anymore.
|
|
I'm going to have to say that's not a bad thing.
|
|
What was the company that bought at Heizerbush?
|
|
Couldn't tell you, it was a German company, I thought, wasn't it?
|
|
Yeah, yeah, I came here with an aim, yes.
|
|
Oh well.
|
|
Probably the same company that bought the Muppets.
|
|
It's a good combo.
|
|
Muppets in Budweiser?
|
|
Yeah, I was more thinking Muppets in beer, but...
|
|
Wouldn't they get soggy?
|
|
That's the point, it's kind of like your towel.
|
|
You can just suck the beer out of them afterwards.
|
|
I would have expected Dan to say that.
|
|
Well.
|
|
This just goes to show that Integralus is perverted and a pig is anybody else.
|
|
Well, Miss Piggy is one of the Muppets after all.
|
|
You know, back at the point.
|
|
I thought Shadow Magic was a great book.
|
|
Yes, I think we all did.
|
|
How is your favorite character?
|
|
My favorite character I have to say was Virgil.
|
|
Virgil was awesome, he was great.
|
|
I have to agree with both of you on that, I really liked him too.
|
|
I thought that Virgil was introduced in a really fun way to the book too.
|
|
I mean, when Connor gets there, it starts off with somebody in his family trying to kill
|
|
him, and then somebody else in his family tries to kill him, and then somebody else tries
|
|
to steal his shoes, he tries to stab that person, and then that person tries to kill him.
|
|
And so he's got three straight family members doing that stuff to him.
|
|
When I heard that scene and how he's leaning on the tip of the sword and he's got his
|
|
arms up to the side of him laughing, all I could picture was Chevy Chase.
|
|
Chevy Chase?
|
|
I could see Chevy Chase doing, you know, flapping his arms and laughing maniacally at some crazy
|
|
thing that should have been horrible.
|
|
I'm speaking of Connor, but that scene, I thought was hilarious.
|
|
I thought it was funny every time I heard it.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I loved hearing Virgil's accents.
|
|
I loved how he never didn't say what was on his mind, it was fun.
|
|
I wasn't stealing your shoes, I thought you were dead, or at least I thought you would
|
|
be soon.
|
|
Throughout the whole book, they constantly talk about the furgo smile too, and how he's
|
|
always flashing that to people.
|
|
It's just this big teethe grin, you know.
|
|
I can't think of an example of it other than maybe like the Chishar cat.
|
|
Right, right.
|
|
It made me happy whenever he said that Virgil flashed his smile.
|
|
You know, you can just picture a cousin or a long-lost friend, you know, someone you haven't
|
|
seen a long time, given you a smile and trying to make everything seem all right.
|
|
And it worked for me.
|
|
It worked for me because I think I actually have a smile that's a lot like that.
|
|
So it always made me smile, and then that made me smile more because, you know, I'm smiling
|
|
like the character that I liked and so on and so forth.
|
|
That works for me because if I was in that book, I'd be Connor.
|
|
I'd be this smart-ass, mouthy guy, and Dan, of course, would be Kielty.
|
|
Well, she vanks.
|
|
He definitely would be a raff.
|
|
If a raff had dirty, dirty thoughts in his mind all the time, yes, he'd be Dan.
|
|
I don't have dirty thoughts on my mind all the time, and I really liked a raff.
|
|
Well, I was just talking about his inclination to speak.
|
|
I liked a raff's character, and I liked the way he spoke.
|
|
When he spoke, it was well thought.
|
|
Yeah, he always was poignant.
|
|
I didn't like how we met a raff.
|
|
Did you guys like that?
|
|
That's maybe the one thing in the book I didn't really buy.
|
|
Is how a raff just kind of walks up?
|
|
Yeah, and completely ignored Connor.
|
|
I mean, I know he never talked throughout the book, but he really didn't ignore people.
|
|
Connor didn't have his respect yet.
|
|
That could be.
|
|
Although he did kind of speak for Connor once they got to the party there at the very beginning,
|
|
and you would think that that would mean something as if he's holding, saying, hey, this guy's
|
|
with me.
|
|
Did he do that?
|
|
Did he speak for me?
|
|
I know he spoke for Fergal.
|
|
I didn't remember him speaking for Connor.
|
|
Well, with Fergal, he definitely spoke out and said, yeah, this guy's definitely from
|
|
horror.
|
|
But whenever it came to Connor, they just associated him with him, and he's, you know,
|
|
he kind of pushed that.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
All right.
|
|
I loved the name or and door, and where everybody was from, you know, or and door.
|
|
They rhyme.
|
|
That's all I liked them.
|
|
But I liked all the names of the places and how everybody was, you know, whoever they
|
|
were of the feeling lands or of or or that kind of thing.
|
|
That was, I liked that.
|
|
That put me right into the story.
|
|
It sucked me right into the experience of it.
|
|
Nah, what you're saying.
|
|
I would have liked to have a map of this world.
|
|
To see what it looked like from a visual perspective.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
A map would have been nice because you always got that with your, you know, middle
|
|
earthbooks.
|
|
You'd get a map and then a few songs and things like that on there.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I hadn't even thought about that having a map.
|
|
That would be really fantastic.
|
|
And like, it would have the little dotted line for where they had walked in the path
|
|
they had traced.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
That way you kind of knew what was going on.
|
|
You could associate a little more.
|
|
But it's kind of hard to just treat that in audio form.
|
|
Mr. Lennahan, there's the value ad that sells your hardcover book.
|
|
Actually, let me go grab the hardcover book and make sure that's not on there.
|
|
I was just going to look at the website, his website for the book, shadow magic.co.uk and
|
|
see if there was a map there, but I don't see anything listed about it.
|
|
I love the trees, man.
|
|
If I was in his shoes every spare minute that I had, I'd be talking to trees.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Come to.
|
|
I mean, they were an interesting element to the story, especially the, was it the mother
|
|
oak?
|
|
Yeah, mother oak.
|
|
See, after hearing the book, it makes me want to go up and hug trees here, even.
|
|
Well, it makes me want to not hug them here, because I don't know trees.
|
|
I don't know which one's which and I wouldn't want to accidentally touch a you tree.
|
|
You'd know you tree if you saw it.
|
|
Interesting, because we just had the tree in front of our house cut down today.
|
|
What a jerk.
|
|
You're a bad person.
|
|
It was dead.
|
|
Did you ask it if you could cut it down first?
|
|
Many times and it responded by drop branches all over the yard and all over the cars and
|
|
threatening to kill people when it went was windy.
|
|
Dan had a crotchety old tree.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
Yeah, it makes me want to go find the different trees so I can associate them.
|
|
I may even end up going to the arboretum.
|
|
I actually did do a little bit of that.
|
|
I went and looked up the, uh, shoot, now I forget what it is, the trees that are in the
|
|
Philly land and I looked it up and checked it out and it was really interesting to see
|
|
the tree and just and the kids were interested in it too.
|
|
That was really kind of cool.
|
|
Talking about the black thorns.
|
|
No, it wasn't the black thorns.
|
|
Those were at the border.
|
|
They, they bordered off the Philly lands, but there, there was a tree in the Philly lands
|
|
and I forget what it was called.
|
|
Alder, maybe, was it Alderwood?
|
|
Alders wasn't, I don't think that's inside the Philly lands.
|
|
That's actually, I think that's the next book.
|
|
Oh, okay, sorry.
|
|
But it, whatever, the tree that was in the Philly lands, I remember when I looked it up,
|
|
it was a, um, like it has these kind of long stems that come up with a lot of tiny little,
|
|
little leaves in a row on each side of the stem and they have these kind of little berries
|
|
that look like shrunken oranges or something.
|
|
There are neat looking tree and I know I've seen them around.
|
|
So it was, it was cool to associate them.
|
|
I did have one, you know, one question when I was listening to it again that I came up
|
|
with when Connor left his, his hazel staff behind.
|
|
Lorcan gave him a black, a black thorn, uh, banter stick and I wonder how in the world
|
|
did Lorcan ever get a black thorn stick?
|
|
I'm going to say he asked very, very politely.
|
|
I've never met anyone that polite.
|
|
I don't think Dave Yates could do that.
|
|
I think Dave Yates could get black thorn.
|
|
Was black thorns or mean?
|
|
What were you going to say, Dan?
|
|
You almost piped up because he's Lorcan.
|
|
All right.
|
|
Lorcan the leprechaun.
|
|
Yeah, exactly.
|
|
Lorcan the leprechaun.
|
|
Well, I guess he probably had connections in there with the feely and I'm sure the feely
|
|
could probably get the black thorns to give up some of their wood for a staff.
|
|
Now no one knew the feely except for Connor's mother, no one, no one had spoken them, spoken
|
|
to them in centuries.
|
|
I'm just figuring there must be other black thorns than the ones at the border.
|
|
Well, I'm sure there is, but also I mean, when the feely land was cut off, I mean, prior
|
|
to that people had interacted with the feely, didn't they?
|
|
Yeah, the people, you know, had talked to the feely and everything they interacted with
|
|
them, but they'd just been banished for so long.
|
|
Yeah, a lot of people thought they weren't even real.
|
|
They thought they were mythical.
|
|
They'd been banished for so long.
|
|
Which is why he gets laughed at whenever he says he's from the feely lands that the party
|
|
and they tell him not to eat me babies, since apparently they've created rumors.
|
|
That's what the story they tell their kids to keep them behaving, the feely will come
|
|
get you.
|
|
Yeah, exactly.
|
|
Maybe a black-formed antistick is like a almost on par with a you bow.
|
|
I kind of got the association that that was more what his hazel-bantistick was.
|
|
I don't think hazel was probably so dangerous to get.
|
|
I think that's what Dan means is that the black thorn was probably very dangerous to ask
|
|
for.
|
|
And I can buy that.
|
|
But then again, Lorca just gave it up kind of easily, though, so here you go.
|
|
Lorcan was a nice guy.
|
|
He got a bad rap, you know, after setting up that horrible, horrible, close line, but he
|
|
was a pretty nice guy overall.
|
|
I liked him.
|
|
Yeah, it was good to see him, you know, come back throughout the book.
|
|
Yeah, not be a complete jerk, like, you know, guilty.
|
|
What'd you think of guilty as the protagonist, antagonist?
|
|
He was so perfectly lovable.
|
|
It was perfect.
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
You can't not hate him.
|
|
I like how he never broke character throughout the entire series and all the stories you heard
|
|
him.
|
|
He was equally despicable everywhere and everyone.
|
|
I have a favorite line from him.
|
|
Do you guys have a favorite line from him?
|
|
I bet it's the same one.
|
|
What's yours?
|
|
I merely stabbed his horse.
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
That's mine.
|
|
He knows how much of a jerk he is because he didn't really want to kill his father, but
|
|
at the same time, he wanted his father dead.
|
|
But he didn't want to actually be the one that could actually be blamed for it.
|
|
Well, he didn't want to be blamed for it.
|
|
He wanted him dead and he would kill him.
|
|
But the funny thing is in his mind, I think he preserved his innocence by stabbing the horse.
|
|
He justified himself that way.
|
|
Well, I think he justified himself in the form of being asked by an alif glass.
|
|
I don't know what you mean.
|
|
Well, you know, not alif glass.
|
|
One of the crystals like a S.I. had the runner neck.
|
|
Yeah, that was the alif or alif crystal.
|
|
No, that's what it was called by.
|
|
I don't remember Kieltie coming in contact with one.
|
|
Well, at least the way that I thought it was, if somebody had stuck one of those two
|
|
his face and said, did you kill your father, he could honestly answer no.
|
|
Oh, I get it.
|
|
Yeah, I see what you mean.
|
|
And in his mind, he really believed that too.
|
|
You're right.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
Yeah, so he's really saving his ass if somebody had asked him that.
|
|
I mean, yeah, he did kill his father.
|
|
Yes, everybody knew it, but at the same time, he's kind of protecting himself.
|
|
Oh, I don't think anybody knew it.
|
|
He would have killed all the witnesses.
|
|
Are we going to be given away the whole book?
|
|
Yes.
|
|
We can give away as much of the book as you'd like, Dan.
|
|
Were you at all surprised that fertile ended up being his son?
|
|
Not in the least.
|
|
No.
|
|
Were you?
|
|
Oh, no.
|
|
Not at all.
|
|
You can see that coming a mile away.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I was very surprised that he was the son of the one-handed prince.
|
|
Yes, that didn't end up being a surprise.
|
|
That and the thing that really got me was that fertile switch sides so easily at the end
|
|
there, I thought that that was kind of, you know, against his character, that he would
|
|
be so trusting of guilty at the end.
|
|
Yeah, that disturbed me too, especially given all that gone through and the trust that
|
|
they established between the three of them, four of them, and then the ritual, the shadow
|
|
magic, ritual, and how every concern was taken to be as pure and up and honest as possible
|
|
that he would just so readily switch sides right at the end like that seemed a little
|
|
out of character.
|
|
Now, I thought it was perfect.
|
|
He was so stressed out and he was so out of his element.
|
|
And it's the denial stage of grief, you know, or whatever it's called, but the different
|
|
stages of loss or grief or whatever it is, he just happened to be in the denial stage
|
|
and keelties just that good of liar and manipulator.
|
|
Still, I mean, after all they had gone through, after all the truth coming out, the story
|
|
coming out, everything, trying to prevent the destruction of the shadow lands and everybody
|
|
on the same page for him to just turn like that easily.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
I still have our time behind it.
|
|
I thought it was, I thought it was set up perfectly.
|
|
I mean, from the finding out the keeltie was his father to the stabbing, in his shoes,
|
|
it would be so much easier to believe that all of that was a lie.
|
|
And on top of it, going into the castle, Connor didn't have a moment of time for him.
|
|
He made that specifically clear, so you can kind of see how he might feel that way.
|
|
I could anyway.
|
|
I thought it was right in character, right in line with the story.
|
|
I thought it was good.
|
|
Well, I could see how he would switch, and especially with it being that emotional of
|
|
the time, but at the same time, it just seems like a real jump.
|
|
But when you get really emotional, jumps like that aren't too hard.
|
|
Yeah, I think you nailed it there.
|
|
It was the emotions.
|
|
He was a far more emotional person than anybody else in the book, except for maybe Jared.
|
|
And I think that explains it.
|
|
I think you're right.
|
|
You nailed it.
|
|
Still, he had absolutely no relationship except an antagonistic one, and a bitter one with
|
|
his father, and a thought of his father who he didn't even know his father, keelty.
|
|
And to turn on his lifelong friend, a wrath, and just everything that he had believed
|
|
and gone with up until this time, just to turn on it, I have a hard time buying it.
|
|
Emotional state or whatever.
|
|
I mean, I don't know.
|
|
It was too predictable, and it just smacked of out of character to me, I thought.
|
|
That's just me.
|
|
I thought it was slightly predictable, but I thought that that kind of led credence
|
|
to its believability.
|
|
I didn't think it was super predictable.
|
|
Well, it was predictable in the way that, you know, it was kind of necessary for the story
|
|
for keelty to come back at all.
|
|
OK, so it was a plot device, and like I said in the last show, I'm a sucker for a good
|
|
plot device.
|
|
I found it more believable than the story of Oasis and cutting his own hand off.
|
|
I love that story.
|
|
I think it's amazing.
|
|
I could definitely see that happening.
|
|
I could see me doing that even.
|
|
Really, the cutting your own hand off, that I bought it right up until that point.
|
|
Really?
|
|
I thought that that was, you know, a summation of it.
|
|
I thought it was a great story, and I thought it was a great piece to like a legend or a
|
|
myth or a fairy story, so it fit perfectly.
|
|
But being put inside this story as well as let a hand put you into, and when these characters
|
|
become so real, I can't picture a real person actually doing that.
|
|
But they're not really real people.
|
|
The fairies, they're not, they're not from around here.
|
|
That's, yeah, okay, that's true, that's true.
|
|
But let a hand did a great job of making you feel like they were.
|
|
And I did like how we kept putting the story off.
|
|
He put that off for two thirds of the book and teased it.
|
|
That was good.
|
|
Yeah, it was really nice that it didn't just tell you that right away, because it definitely
|
|
wouldn't have been as believable before you knew the Oasis and character more.
|
|
Because what you get from it at the beginning of the book is just this kind of Connor's opinion
|
|
only of him.
|
|
And that doesn't paint the best picture of a father.
|
|
Yeah, he comes off as this very cool calculating, almost by the numbers kind of guy protective
|
|
think before leaping, whereas if, you know, that story portrays him as more fiery, hot
|
|
headed and jump first, ask questions later kind of guy.
|
|
Well, he knew what was at stake as well.
|
|
He had win the vote race.
|
|
So if that meant cutting his hand off for his brother to not end up king, that's what
|
|
he'd have to do.
|
|
Also that was in his very early youth and it paints a good picture of how different he
|
|
is as a young man than as a grown man.
|
|
No spoilers for book two there.
|
|
Did I spoil book two?
|
|
No, but I came close to what I was tempted.
|
|
Oh, okay.
|
|
So there's one character that we've mentioned maybe twice throughout this whole thing that
|
|
is really important in this book and that's, that's Esa.
|
|
I don't think we mentioned her at all.
|
|
No, we haven't mentioned her at all yet, but she was, she was pivotal.
|
|
I could have done without her.
|
|
But why could you have done without her, Dan?
|
|
She served primarily as a foil and a love interest to the main character, Connor.
|
|
I just didn't find her character overly compelling, but she was so hot.
|
|
She didn't have to begin spelling.
|
|
She was so beautiful.
|
|
And that's why this character there just for her looks.
|
|
Not just her looks though, but for how taken with her, Connor was.
|
|
He really was taken with her.
|
|
When he met her at the party, he was totally charmed by her.
|
|
And that's the power of fairies.
|
|
Well, that's, you know, just kind of the power of Conner's used to seeing ugly people
|
|
and you just don't see that in the land.
|
|
And then you see Esa, who's, I want to say like the 10th person he's seen and she's actually
|
|
looks like she's his age, that's, you know, that's going to strike pretty hard with you.
|
|
And she's very friendly to him at first.
|
|
She really makes a good impression and it sounds like, you know, in the hierarchy of beautiful
|
|
women, it's Conner's mom, Conner's aunt, and then Esa.
|
|
Still wasn't overly wellms with the character.
|
|
No matter how much of a spin you put on her beauty, I don't care.
|
|
See, the character I really didn't like was his girlfriend in the real world.
|
|
Yes, same here.
|
|
She reminded me too much of my ex-wife.
|
|
Oh, that's, that's not why I didn't like her.
|
|
What, what was there about her and the story at all?
|
|
I mean, just a few brief mentions.
|
|
Well, the thing I didn't like about her was that she existed and she prevented my main
|
|
love interest from happening.
|
|
Yeah, like, like I said, she reminded me of my ex-wife.
|
|
I think the severed hand vented that more than anything.
|
|
Wait, severed hand?
|
|
No, he overcame that.
|
|
She was still always on that other side of the wall with the knife ready to plunge into
|
|
his heart and never trusting him because he was thought to be the son of the one-handed
|
|
prince all the way up to the end, even up to the end.
|
|
And wasn't that, wasn't that one of the reasons why, like, he just lost interest in her or
|
|
not lost interest.
|
|
I won't say that.
|
|
Just felt utterly betrayed by her because of that.
|
|
Yes, at the end of the book.
|
|
One would hope so.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
He felt totally betrayed.
|
|
But then again, you know, that whole thing with them, everybody being antagonistic towards
|
|
him, I thought I like how they kind of kept that up, though, because you're talking about
|
|
their whole world was at risk because of this one person.
|
|
I mean, I guess, you know, we look at it in this country that if you are, like, given
|
|
a decade, like this decade now, it's Muslim or Islamic.
|
|
And your question, if you are anyone from the Middle East, you know, you looked at with
|
|
a skeptical eye by a lot of people in this country who, as soon as, you know, push you
|
|
off into some camp or, you know, have the FBI watch you then to trust you.
|
|
So I like how that concept kind of carried over into the fairy world.
|
|
And based upon, you know, their beliefs, they weren't trusting him at all.
|
|
They were ready to string him up and draw and order him.
|
|
Well, the people that believed inside the, you know, future like that, that believed
|
|
inside the prophecy, everybody else, you know, hey, this is a cool guy.
|
|
They took him at who he was or who his parents were, in some cases, like with Jared.
|
|
Yeah, the people who believed in the prophecy, when they saw him, they just kind of pictured
|
|
him with his finger on the nuclear button the whole time.
|
|
And no matter how great a guy he was, there was, you know, that he's right there.
|
|
He could just trip and fall in the world to be destroyed.
|
|
They didn't know how it was going to happen.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
No matter how much he was willing to try to help them or to fix their whole, uh, key
|
|
problem.
|
|
Along the way, he had a bunch of prophetic dreams.
|
|
One of the dreams that Connor had that, like most of the dreams that he had came true
|
|
to some extent, although the one of the final prophetic dreams was his uncle pushing the
|
|
button and destroying everything.
|
|
And this like big, bad weapon, that, that dream seemed like it seemed so powerful.
|
|
But it never really came close to fruition.
|
|
It seemed like, you know what I mean?
|
|
Like the way that it ended seemed opposite of the way that that dream went as compared
|
|
to the other dreams he had.
|
|
Maybe I, I saw his dreams as being more of possibilities.
|
|
I didn't think any of them were strictly speaking prophetic.
|
|
I thought that you showed kind of possibilities.
|
|
Yeah, I didn't think they were guaranteed fact.
|
|
And they were kind of masked at the same time, because they weren't straightforward as
|
|
well.
|
|
No, they weren't straightforward at all, like the one with Fergel and the cherries where,
|
|
you know, the cherry juices running down Fergel's face and his tone of voice sounds really,
|
|
really ominous, but Fergel's got the giant grin on his face while it's happening.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And the whole disabling of the doomsday weapon, rather benign, very unsatisfying for some
|
|
reason.
|
|
I don't know why.
|
|
I expected there to be more of a struggle on that.
|
|
And it was just dig a hole and sever the, the gold circle.
|
|
They had to make some spikes out of the gold too.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
I wanted more, I wanted more battle, I guess.
|
|
There really wasn't much of a, a climactic battle at the end, like a big war type thing.
|
|
Was there?
|
|
I'm trying to remember, what was there?
|
|
There really wasn't.
|
|
They do kind of just gloss over the fights in this.
|
|
There wasn't enough of an army to have a big battle.
|
|
I guess that has to be what it is, is that the army, the Red Hand, was so small that they
|
|
couldn't really have a final battle.
|
|
Yeah, they would not have won militarily.
|
|
If, I mentioned the Tolkien Professor already, Dan, but if you were listening to that guy,
|
|
I think he would say that what you were expecting out of this was some kind of a Yucatastrophe
|
|
which is like the opposite of a catastrophe.
|
|
It would be some kind of, you know, miracle that would happen and swing the tides to the
|
|
good guys.
|
|
Which that's kind of what happened with the whole gold line thing, where they turned
|
|
his bomb to blow up, you know, just the castle.
|
|
Didn't end up being just a castle wall.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah, blew out the castle wall.
|
|
I don't think that was, I don't think that could be considered a Yucatastrophe though,
|
|
because that's something that they planned and executed.
|
|
They were expecting it.
|
|
A Yucatastrophe is something like totally, totally unexpected, like, you know, in the Lord
|
|
of the Rings when the black ships show up and they feel a good guys.
|
|
Oh, so you're saying that a Yucatastrophe is more of a Deus Ex Machina.
|
|
I don't think I'd say that because I don't know what that means.
|
|
Deus Ex is kind of an example of where God shows up and just fixes things for you.
|
|
Is that what you were looking for, Dan?
|
|
Not really.
|
|
I was looking more for a big battle at the end.
|
|
Yeah, he just wanted to combat.
|
|
That actually is my least favorite plot device, by the way.
|
|
I think it destroys novels.
|
|
Combat, does are Yucatastrophe.
|
|
Yucatastrophe's.
|
|
I want a Conan to come out of the field swinging.
|
|
Oh, I'd love to hear Conan swing.
|
|
That'd be awesome.
|
|
Then again, you know, I did enjoy the combat throughout the rest of the book.
|
|
The challenges with the bandits and not the bandits, the banshees in particular.
|
|
I like to see more of those guys running around.
|
|
I feel like the second book, then, the scene with the lemon juice in the pummel of the
|
|
sword.
|
|
That was great.
|
|
Oh, you know what was that?
|
|
Wait, was that in the second book?
|
|
No, no, that was in this first book.
|
|
Oh, okay.
|
|
Yeah, yeah.
|
|
I was going to say, I know I'm about a third away, if not more, into the second book.
|
|
I thought that was in the first, yeah.
|
|
I like that, that fight at the end.
|
|
I like the fact that when he actually killed somebody, it affected him psychologically.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah, it wasn't.
|
|
It was just Magicaly.
|
|
Oh, killed somebody.
|
|
And then that, of course, got easier with time.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I like the scene where he couldn't go on after he killed that first guy, and he just kind
|
|
of stood there and the guy ran at him and his father cuts the guy in half and the guy
|
|
still running.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Oh, yeah.
|
|
Wait, who's the, who's the really skilled combat trainer?
|
|
Is it Doc?
|
|
Docy.
|
|
Yes.
|
|
Is this the book where they talk about, no, it's a second book where they talk about
|
|
Docy and that other guy, right?
|
|
Yes.
|
|
That's the second book.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Because I really like, I like some of the weapons that he had and just, Docy was, I thought,
|
|
a really cool character.
|
|
Docy was fantastic in that training session was great.
|
|
Yeah, even as, with how short it was.
|
|
I liked the fight where Docy's telling him, you know, my next attack is going to do this
|
|
and you have no choice but to attack me back.
|
|
That was what I liked about the fight scenes is how he was describing the parry and the
|
|
thrust and the swing and what the effect would be of this.
|
|
I really liked how that went with, with the sword fighting.
|
|
The bandistic's not so much because that maybe just because they're not real and they're
|
|
not based in reality, but for the sword fighting, I thought that was fantastic.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I liked how he was not like this ultra, you know, skilled combatant from the get go.
|
|
But yet, he did have training from his father growing up.
|
|
So he wasn't like, oh, I'm just going to pick up a sword for the first time and here
|
|
we are, you know, fighting off the banshees and every other evil that comes along.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
How he'd actually had some training as he was growing up.
|
|
I didn't like how so many of the banshees were completely untrained and they were just,
|
|
you know, roobs walking up.
|
|
I mean, if you're immortal, you think you picked up a little something somewhere.
|
|
You would think in a place where the swords and bantistics are common that they wouldn't
|
|
grow up being trained.
|
|
Even if they weren't trained, even if, you know, their parents were low lives who didn't
|
|
take any interest or didn't bother, you'd think at least in some bar somewhere, they'd
|
|
be talking with their buddies and talking about what works and what doesn't.
|
|
These guys were just, they were clueless, especially with them being banshees, which in
|
|
my opinion is a rather combat oriented, you know, race.
|
|
They were the protectors of the western shore.
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
Well, the guys that were chasing them around, those banshees, long hair.
|
|
Was that his name?
|
|
A big hair, but yeah.
|
|
Big hair.
|
|
I mean, weren't they, aside from big hair, were most of them just like bandit kind of guys?
|
|
Yeah, that's what I mean.
|
|
Like, they were just guys off the street.
|
|
I mean, put yourself in big hair shoes, okay?
|
|
You got, you know, 10 or 20 guys serve in India and they're all completely retarded.
|
|
They don't know how to swing a sword.
|
|
I mean, wouldn't, wouldn't you just like step aside and say, alright guys, look, here's
|
|
how to parry.
|
|
Here's how to block if someone swings at you.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
It was weird that they were so untrained for immortals anyway.
|
|
I could, I could see mortals being that untrained.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I mean, that got all the time in the world.
|
|
I don't know if I, I mean, I didn't pick up that they weren't untrained.
|
|
I got the feeling that like, Esa and Arath, Fergal, and even to do some extent, Conor
|
|
towards the latter end of the book, were especially trained.
|
|
They were trained beyond the standard infantry person.
|
|
They had like grown up with some training by the masters whereas, you know, I kind of felt
|
|
that they just had the one up, had these been like, you know, Conor's teammates been
|
|
a wrath, the peasant, and Esa, the merchant's daughter or whatever, just like came together
|
|
without any skills or training beforehand and just picked up what they had along the way.
|
|
They would have been taken out lickety spit.
|
|
I agree with that except for Conor.
|
|
He wasn't trained particularly well.
|
|
His dad trained him to block and to thrust and he took some fencing classes but he was
|
|
by no means a soldier like these other guys had been trained to be.
|
|
I don't think he was at their level getting closer towards the end of the book.
|
|
I think he was kind of more in the same part with maybe a simple infantry person which
|
|
these banshees may have been.
|
|
Yeah, exactly, but he walked all over every infantry guy that he fought.
|
|
Big hair was his first true match and that guy was, you know, a leader.
|
|
Yeah, that guy was going to kick his ass, you know?
|
|
No, without sand and lime juice.
|
|
Well, he cheated but when it comes down to it, life and death cheating is a win.
|
|
Wait, did he kill big hair or was that Dahi that ended up killing him?
|
|
It was Dahi that ended up killing him but the only reason Dahi stepped in was because
|
|
he used the lime juice.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah, I think he would have won that fighter else Dahi would have stepped in before that.
|
|
Dude, that's because he's so good man, that's when he's all about smart mouth, master swordsman.
|
|
I think a lot of it had to do with his sword too.
|
|
I mean, he was carrying the sword of door.
|
|
He was carrying the lawn mower.
|
|
Right.
|
|
What's wrong with sheep?
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
What's wrong with sheep?
|
|
So what'd you think about the ending, his final choice to return to the real world?
|
|
I think it's a moron.
|
|
It reminded me too much of my ex-wife.
|
|
Him returning to the real world reminded you of your ex-wife.
|
|
Does she make you return to the real world?
|
|
She actually did one time.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
I kind of thought that was right.
|
|
Here he is.
|
|
He finally gets this mom.
|
|
Everything's good.
|
|
He wants to return to the real world because it's more normal.
|
|
Normalcy, he wanted.
|
|
There is no way I would have even looked at coming back.
|
|
Yeah, I know.
|
|
It was so blatantly not the right decision.
|
|
But he jumped right into it, you know, like, ah, get some new shoes.
|
|
Here we go.
|
|
No.
|
|
I can understand getting new shoes.
|
|
I don't think they had very good shoes there.
|
|
I can't imagine being in his position and wanting to walk away from his mom like that.
|
|
I mean, I can see him wanting to walk away from Asa because he was still hurt.
|
|
But wanting to walk away from his mom, I just, I didn't buy that.
|
|
And maybe that's just because I'm a mama's boy and I always have been, but I couldn't
|
|
see it.
|
|
Even his dad.
|
|
Why would you walk away from your dad like that?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Why would you walk away from everyone that you know that's infinitely better than everybody
|
|
you know in the real world?
|
|
Why would you walk away from those apples?
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
Mother Oak.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
The list goes on and on and on.
|
|
I mean, you know, the internet is great, guys, but, you know, it ain't worth coming
|
|
back from tearing an oak for.
|
|
I just don't see it.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
And what was he going back to, though, too?
|
|
I mean, without his dad, yeah, he was going back to just his girlfriend.
|
|
That was it.
|
|
That's all he had.
|
|
Now you see my point.
|
|
Why did they let him?
|
|
Why did his parents let him like, what the hell was he going back to?
|
|
Didn't have it.
|
|
Didn't even have it.
|
|
Did he have a job?
|
|
I don't even think he had a job.
|
|
No.
|
|
No, but they let him make his own choice.
|
|
I mean, that, that I can understand, but he didn't send him back with a bag of gold
|
|
or anything like what the heck was he going to do?
|
|
Spend his father's money until he has to go back.
|
|
Well, I guess that's what happens.
|
|
Really?
|
|
Really?
|
|
Start reading second one.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I mean, I mean, the same could be said if he had stayed in tiered and oak, what was
|
|
he going to do?
|
|
He didn't really have any skills there.
|
|
I mean, understanding he has a position, but his parents can't hold his hand forever.
|
|
It was time for him to make his own decision.
|
|
And he would have resented them if they said, no, you know, that kind of thing.
|
|
I don't know.
|
|
I think he just has so much more opportunity there than he does back here.
|
|
Yeah, he really did.
|
|
I mean, if I got sucked into tiered and oak, I'd be the guy carrying, you know, the
|
|
pea bucket up to back and forth to the king's chamber, but he's a prince.
|
|
Yeah, exactly.
|
|
He's got infinite amounts of everything, not just the prince, but the prince of the
|
|
kingdom that lives on the gold mine, the only gold mine.
|
|
Yeah, the house that rules the whole land is, it was kind of crazy.
|
|
But it goes to that point that a lot of times on, on podio books, a lot of the
|
|
stories are what I call fish out of water stories, where you're introduced to a
|
|
character and they're in their setting and they're comfortable and they're
|
|
well adjusted and all of a sudden their setting changes completely.
|
|
And usually on podio books, anyway, the fish out of water stories are not
|
|
very good, at least the starting isn't very good because how their setting
|
|
changes is not believable at all.
|
|
Lenahan did such a good job of making a fish out of water story that worked.
|
|
It was perfect.
|
|
He did it the right way and it was, it was the right thing to do for the story.
|
|
None of the other fish out of water stories do that.
|
|
Some of them, one of them is so bad.
|
|
The girl falls asleep, wakes up a million years in the future and everything's
|
|
different, but Lenahan set the story was based on him being a fish out of water.
|
|
I thought it was perfect.
|
|
So at the end, he just kind of went back to where he was supposed to be, or at
|
|
least where he thought he was supposed to be, not that I approve of his decision.
|
|
I wish he would have stayed, but he should have slapped Dessa across the face
|
|
and then left.
|
|
Oh, there's lots of things he should have done before he left.
|
|
It is not that kind of podcast.
|
|
Oh, that's not even what I meant.
|
|
Yeah, I was totally taken with us.
|
|
I was, I was every time he looked at her and fell in love with her.
|
|
I was right there with him.
|
|
I could totally see it there.
|
|
Yeah, same here.
|
|
I wouldn't have left, but that's just me.
|
|
I wish Ferdinand wouldn't have died here here.
|
|
I know that was killer.
|
|
I mean, I would trade almost anybody for keeping Ferdinand.
|
|
Heck, I'd trade the main character for keeping Ferdinand.
|
|
Yeah, I know if book two were just like Ferdinand's revenge, that would be a good,
|
|
but that'd be worth it.
|
|
Ferdinand's revenge.
|
|
It was kind of a bummer though that you think about like,
|
|
throughout the whole book, they always wanted to kill the son of the one-arm prince.
|
|
And at the end, they do kill the son of the one-arm prince.
|
|
It was unfulfillingly sad.
|
|
I wish he would have stayed alive.
|
|
Isn't that what they say?
|
|
Like really, really good, engaging books are books where you are not sure if they're going
|
|
to kill a character that you're completely taken with though.
|
|
This is not what they say.
|
|
I don't know who they is, but I could have just, they could have kept that and I could have kept the Ferdinand.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
Yeah, Ferdinand was a really, really likeable character.
|
|
It was great, but it, it killing him just showed how sad that killing him really was.
|
|
What kind of showed you how desperate everything had to be to?
|
|
Desperate's a good word because they didn't really, I mean, at the same time,
|
|
they probably could have helped him.
|
|
That was the thing.
|
|
See, okay, that, oh man, I'm glad you said that.
|
|
That was the thing that got me because a voice and got shot in the chest with a crossbow.
|
|
And I can't remember Connor's mom's name, but she was just like, oh, Connor,
|
|
you know, use the Rothloo amlet and get the heck out of here.
|
|
And this will be fine, but they just sat there and shook their head about Ferdinand.
|
|
Yeah, they just kind of like, well, um, guess he's got to die.
|
|
That's what, that's what I was wondering was, did they decide that they weren't going to help him?
|
|
Or did they decide that he was beyond help?
|
|
That was, to me, the biggest question in the book.
|
|
Yep.
|
|
Deirdre was her name.
|
|
So what do you think then?
|
|
Did Deirdre decide that he needed to die to fulfill the prophecy?
|
|
Or did she realize that he was beyond help because he was still alive when she shook her head?
|
|
I got the impression that he was beyond help at that point.
|
|
I think he was mortally willing to be on hell because I don't know why they would let him
|
|
die to fulfill the prophecy.
|
|
If throughout the rest of the entire book, they were willing to fight against that prophecy
|
|
when it was their own son that was assumed to be, why would they just turn and let a
|
|
comrade like that, just, especially one who'd been through such horrible experiences, just die.
|
|
Because it's not their son anymore.
|
|
Yeah, because the prophecy at that point was revealed.
|
|
And these are people who believe in prophecies.
|
|
Yeah, but I got the impression that Oisyn and Deirdre would have fought the prophecy.
|
|
They fought the prophecy for so long.
|
|
Why would they turn around and just accept it now that it was no longer their son?
|
|
And they're like, ah, well, okay, I guess it is true.
|
|
Kill them.
|
|
I think because the whole time throughout the book, when they talked to, when they talked about it,
|
|
they would either say or at least hint that the prophetess was never wrong.
|
|
Prophecies just don't always come about the way you think they come about.
|
|
So I think they were reserved to that fact.
|
|
What I want to know is, is it impossible for Oisyn's hand to get chopped off again?
|
|
I think not.
|
|
Maybe his other hand.
|
|
But either way, he's still missing his now.
|
|
So it's, you know, less obvious.
|
|
Well, yeah, but now Kiyothi doesn't have a son.
|
|
Yeah, and the world was saved.
|
|
So the prophecy is fulfilled and we don't have to worry about that prophecy again.
|
|
But what's the prophecy that the world would be destroyed by the, was the son of the one
|
|
arm prince was at it?
|
|
Not that he would destroy the world, but that he had to die or else the world would be destroyed.
|
|
They didn't specifically name the son of the one arm prince as the agent of destruction.
|
|
It just said that he had to die or else.
|
|
All right, I guess at that point, I don't know.
|
|
I didn't think the adra just let him die to fulfill the prophecy.
|
|
I felt that there was no way to save him.
|
|
That's what I believe.
|
|
And that's what I'm sticking with, Pokey.
|
|
Don't ruin my world.
|
|
Okay, but that's what we're here for.
|
|
Yeah, I just think the characters are a little more complicated than you're given them credit for, Dan.
|
|
And I think it's too late to have not ruined it.
|
|
Next time you listen to it, you're going to wonder that.
|
|
Yep, definitely.
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Maybe I'll just go back and listen to that part.
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But you have the book in Tag Rowland.
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Yeah, is the book any different than the actual audio book?
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Or is it like word for word to say?
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I haven't finished reading the book.
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It's got some differences though.
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I hope it's not word for word the same, because he flubs a couple of lines here and there.
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And my kids every time I have and my kids picked up on it.
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In chapter two, for instance, he says on key LT.
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And I don't think that was intentional.
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Yes, I also picked and it made me go, what the heck?
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Like you want to write the guy.
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Let him go, oh, fix that before you print it.
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Yeah, I would hope that he did.
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Like I said, I haven't read much of the actual book.
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Not as a criticism, but as a constructive criticism.
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|
Because, you know, you care about the guy, about John Lennahan.
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|
Well, what I was going to say is it's more of a criticism of,
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hey, get your book fixed because we love your book.
|
|
Yeah, exactly that's what I mean.
|
|
We don't want people to look at it and go, oh, well, he's got misspellings in there
|
|
and things like that. That just sucks.
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|
Yeah, you don't want people to go, oh, this is what you get when you have indie writers.
|
|
Yeah.
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|
Because as an indie writer, he's created a book and a world that far surpasses
|
|
90% of everything I've ever read.
|
|
Yep, he's created a real good book here.
|
|
He really, really has a mic dancer.
|
|
The depth of the characters is so well done and so complete and so believable.
|
|
Every one of them I thought was completely believable.
|
|
I could see this series of books that I just work on on the third one now
|
|
by the time the third or whatever he comes to the end of it.
|
|
It will be like a significant loss in my life and kind of like getting to the end of the
|
|
Harry Potter series that here, you know, these stories are now at an end and you're not
|
|
going to get any more, at least not any more that are this good.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And you're going to miss them.
|
|
Yeah, I didn't read Harry Potter, but they had the same feeling at the end of the
|
|
the Trader's Tales, Nathan Lowell's books, with the same thing.
|
|
The characters are most of them.
|
|
I would say, you know, actually all the main characters are easy, very easy to become invested in.
|
|
They are and they all, well, most of them anyway, kind of reminded me
|
|
if not of myself, you know, Connor reminded me of me and most of the other characters
|
|
reminded me of people that I know and care about.
|
|
Well, I think that's the goal of any author is to make it to where you can associate
|
|
with the characters or associate one of your friends to a character.
|
|
Most of them don't succeed at that.
|
|
He hit that one out of the park.
|
|
I got to get rolling on my end, but you guys continue on with this magnificence
|
|
because it's a really good book.
|
|
I loved it and my kids loved it and my wife loved it.
|
|
Flute music aside, it was awesome.
|
|
All right, well, thanks Dan for being with us.
|
|
It was really cool.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
Yeah, thank you for coming out.
|
|
Hey, no problem.
|
|
And the next one we're doing handbook for the criminally insane, right?
|
|
We will do that at your turn to pick and that's the book you pick.
|
|
So handbook for the criminally insane.
|
|
Was that on potty of books?
|
|
Yeah, I'll drop you the URL.
|
|
And none of us have heard this book yet, so we have no idea if it's good or bad or anything.
|
|
This is the first one that we're doing that no one's listened to yet.
|
|
True that.
|
|
I'm excited, but I will talk to you guys on IRC later.
|
|
So have a happy and thank you for having me on.
|
|
Was there anything that you didn't like about the book?
|
|
Why don't you get started on anything that you didn't like?
|
|
And I may be able to pick some things up after that.
|
|
I had to think about it now.
|
|
I know. It's kind of harsh.
|
|
I didn't write it down.
|
|
There were things I didn't like while I was listening to it,
|
|
but looking back and retrospect, they just kind of get washed over by the overall
|
|
fun of the book.
|
|
And I think maybe if I had the level of criticism at it,
|
|
the biggest criticism I could level would be to say that it was such a fun
|
|
book that it made it not seem like a tremendous literary masterpiece,
|
|
but I don't think that's the kind of book that it was intended to be.
|
|
Yeah, I don't think it was either.
|
|
I think it was intended to be a really good story.
|
|
And it was a good story, and it was mostly believable.
|
|
You know, except for the bits and pieces here and there where
|
|
Connor was so out of place, someone should have pointed out that,
|
|
you know, hey, he's not wearing sandals.
|
|
Hey, that shirt's funny.
|
|
Hey, he's not really from a place.
|
|
He's dodging our questions.
|
|
Did he kind of washed over that?
|
|
And I, you know, it's really hard to criticize this book, isn't it?
|
|
Yeah, I think that was kind of required, though, because he's not from around there.
|
|
And you can't really just say surprise and expect him to fake it.
|
|
And they're not used to people being from the real world.
|
|
So it's kind of unbelievable.
|
|
So it doesn't even crush your mind.
|
|
Okay, I have another thing.
|
|
I was thinking of criticisms.
|
|
Actually, all I can come up with is another compliment for the book.
|
|
I thought that the way he left the book open for a sequel or the ways he did so
|
|
throughout all the book were brilliant.
|
|
Most books go through a book and tell a single story and leave it at that.
|
|
And then at the end of the book, some thing will happen.
|
|
At least the door opened for the sequel.
|
|
But I loved how Lenny Hinn did that all the way through.
|
|
Like the boars acting crazy was never explained.
|
|
And the snake showing up was never explained.
|
|
And all this stuff that is going on, that is unexplained, that you're like,
|
|
okay, he has to get to this in the sequel.
|
|
I'd like how the whole book was peppered with that.
|
|
Yeah, the whole time he's building it toward, you know, there have to be more books.
|
|
Yeah, because he could have left all those things out.
|
|
And then at the end, oh, Kielty gets away and now there has to be a sequel.
|
|
And I hate that kind of thing.
|
|
And that's not what he did.
|
|
And I really appreciate that he didn't do that to me.
|
|
I think that's it. I'm having such a hard time coming up with any criticism
|
|
without listening to it again and taking notes, which I'm not going to do
|
|
before we hit stop on this thing.
|
|
Yeah, same here.
|
|
So I'm going to speak for Dan here and say that we give this three thumbs up
|
|
that everyone liked it.
|
|
Well, can I use both of my thumbs or can I only use one of them?
|
|
Because I'm not like a lice and I actually have two hands here.
|
|
Wow, we get four thumbs up in the three of us.
|
|
That's fantastic.
|
|
It is.
|
|
Yeah, so if anyone's listening to this and you haven't read the book
|
|
and we just spoiled it on you for once, that's okay.
|
|
Because we did not tell the story that this guy tells.
|
|
It's still worth listening to.
|
|
And there is still a sequel that's been built in.
|
|
This is books been designed as a trilogy.
|
|
And there are cliff hangers and there are,
|
|
there is more story to listen to.
|
|
And I can say that the second book, because I've listened to it already,
|
|
the second book is easily as good as the first book.
|
|
Minus that he doesn't say Shadow Magic quite the same.
|
|
Yeah, I have to say that while we may have given away the ending,
|
|
we definitely didn't give away the journey or the story that goes along with it.
|
|
No, and you know what?
|
|
We didn't even give away the ending just to say that, you know,
|
|
I think we kind of mentioned in passing that Kielty got his hand cut off
|
|
and Fergel was killed.
|
|
We didn't go through anything about Shadow Magic,
|
|
how that worked, how the rune choosing worked.
|
|
So there's still a whole lot of story here that we haven't touched.
|
|
Yeah, exactly.
|
|
I mean, this books, you said it was eight hours long in total?
|
|
Yeah, I think it was like 8.7 hours,
|
|
is what I put it into a playlist is what it says.
|
|
It was almost nine hours of listening and it goes by way too fast.
|
|
Yeah, exactly.
|
|
What I'd like to say is that, you know,
|
|
our next book is going to be handbook for the criminally insane.
|
|
You can find it on patio books and then blame Dan if it stinks.
|
|
And you can blame me if it's great.
|
|
Exactly.
|
|
If people want to join us on these recordings,
|
|
you know, I think that's totally acceptable.
|
|
I think we're totally open to that.
|
|
Get in touch with us on IRC if you're interested in reviewing our next book with us
|
|
or if you're one of the guys on IRC already and you're ready to jump in,
|
|
that's cool.
|
|
We're using Bumble to record the sand and we're using the latest version 1.2.3
|
|
because all the earlier versions, you heard the last show.
|
|
It didn't work as well as the show, obviously.
|
|
And you'll need a beverage to review.
|
|
That's I think those are the three prerequisites to hop in on here with us.
|
|
Are you up for that integral?
|
|
Yeah, definitely.
|
|
We'd love to have more people.
|
|
It's definitely more hacker public radio of us.
|
|
Yeah, it definitely is.
|
|
And, you know, and of course, if three or four completely other people want to do a book club
|
|
too without us, that's also hacker public radio.
|
|
It's just, you know, the next one that we're going to do is going to be handbooked for
|
|
the criminally insane.
|
|
Well, I think that's all we've got.
|
|
Yeah, that's all we've got.
|
|
Definitely.
|
|
I'm just trying to think of a way to wrap it up.
|
|
And I don't know how to wrap it up, except to say thank you for listening.
|
|
Oh, I see what you did there.
|
|
Thank you for listening to Hacker Public Radio.
|
|
For more information on the show and how to contribute your own shows, visit hackerpublicradio.org.
|
|
You should just cut off this part here where I'm describing what to do.
|