Tag: Intentions

Andrzej Sapkowski – Blood of Elves | Review

Title: Blood of Elves

Author: Andrzej Sapkowski

Type: Fiction

Page Count: 316

Rating: 3.5/5

The issue that I had with this book is exactly the issue that I was worried about. I think I just prefer Sapkowski as a short story writer than as a novelist, although I will admit that he’s pretty good either way and so it’s not as though I didn’t enjoy this book. It was still all right, it just wasn’t as good as the short story collections.

Other than that, though, there’s a lot here to enjoy. As always, Sapkowski does a great job of asking the reader complicated moral questions, and I like that there’s a bit of a grey area between some of the good guys and some of the bad guys that keeps you guessing about people’s intentions. It’s got a lot of great political intrigue in a similar vein to A Song of Ice and Fire, although it’s by no means a knock-off.

There was even some interesting stuff on gender, because the Witcher has an apprentice who he’s teaching, and she happens to be a girl. There’s a lot of stuff on ethics too, because Geralt faces some difficult decisions along the way. Oh, and a war with the Nilfgardians is beckoning, too.

So overall, I thought this book was just okay, and while I would recommend it, I think I’d suggest going with the short story collections first as a way to ease yourself into the world and its politics. I should also offset this review by pointing out that I felt kind of similar to this when I read the first book, and then it sat with me for a while and I realised, looking back on it, that it was fricken awesome. I wouldn’t be surprised if the same thing ends up happening here. So yeah, there’s that.

Learn more about Blood of Elves.


Oscar Wilde – Intentions | Review

Title: Intentions

Author: Oscar Wilde

Type: Fiction/Non-Fiction

Page Count/Review Word Count: 263

Rating: 7/10

 

Oscar Wilde - Intentions

Oscar Wilde – Intentions

 

Oscar Wilde was notorious for flamboyancy and wit, but only one of them comes across in Intentions – I’m sure you can guess which one. Intentions consists of a couple of Wilde’s essays, and a couple more that masquerade as plays.

Now, when you think of an essay, it’s only natural to think of a dry chunk of text that was written for an academic thesis on the most boring subject imaginable. Not so with Wilde – despite being over a hundred years old, his essays are genuinely intriguing and offer a unique insight in to both the way that his mind worked and the way that Victorian society looked upon the arts.

 

Oscar Wilde

Oscar Wilde

 

Possibly most interesting are the thoughts expressed in ‘The Critic As Artist’ – despite being structured like a play, it’s little more than a soliloquy, and the character of Gilbert is essentially Wilde himself. In it, the Gilbert/Wilde hybrid speaks about how the art of criticism requires much more skill than the initial art of creation, and that critical faculties enable artistic creation in the first place, while criticism is free and independent of constraints.

Got that? It’s difficult to explain the nuances of Wilde’s essay in a summarisation, so if you want to learn more about his aesthetic philosophy, I suggest that you grab a copy of the book and read all about it. It’s the longest of all the essays in Intentions, presented as a dialogue in two parts. Get ready to bed yourself in.

 

An Oscar Wilde Quote...

An Oscar Wilde Quote…

 

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