------------------------------------------------------------ Response/Christina: reading, (zaibatsu), 12/31/2018 ------------------------------------------------------------ User christina at C.S. posed some good questions relative to the joy that comes from reading[1]. Here are a few responses: "What is the first book you remember loving?" I recall the first time I felt like I had read a "real book" all by myself. It was "That Game From Outer Space" by Stephen Manes. I still have the actual copy that I had as a kid (salvaged it from my mother's house years ago.) The feeling of becoming engrossed in a plot, identifying with the protagonist, and impatiently plowing through instead of doing other things was entirely new to me. I delighted in those novel feelings, and adore them still today long after the novelty has passed. (As an aside, I reached out to Stephen Manes recently, to thank him for his book, and received a beautiful reply. People are quite wonderful!) "What book/series would you like to see adapted to film?" I would dearly love to see a solid, well-funded, true adaptation of the book "Michael O'Halloran" by Gene Stratton-Porter. When a movie makes me cry, I am often annoyed; it's usually too contrived, almost as if it were an emotional manipulation. When a book makes me cry, I am usually grateful for the beauty and depth I have found. Perhaps I'm watching the wrong movies and reading the right books. "Who are your favourite protagonists?" I'll throw out two somewhat obscure characters that I really find amusing: Doyle's Professor Challenger, and Chesterton's Gabriel Syme. Challenger is boisterous and ill-behaved, yet full of passion, knowledge, and experience. Syme is a fearless detective trapped in an impossible mystery. I love their confidence. "Who are your favourite antagonists?" Perhaps the Count of Monte Cristo (Edward Dantes). Arguably he is both the protagonist and the antagonist, and this duality is, I feel, quite engrossing. The other possible antagonists in the book are so weak by comparison as to be nothing more than cowering whelps. Watching as Edward wends his way toward an understanding of God and justice and revenge and love is awesome. It's also, for me, more believable than the evil-for-evil-sake antagonists. "What is your favourite film adaptation of a book?" I'm not sure it's my favourite, but the one that comes to mind right away is the '83 adaptation of Jane Eyre with Timothy Dalton and Zelah Clarke. For whatever reason, I just enjoy watching it over and over. "What books have you read the most times?" Holy books, I guess. Apart from those, I enjoy reading Sherlock Holmes. I've read "The White Company" several times, and a few others. I don't tend to re-read books as much as I re-watch movies. I'm not sure what's wrong with me. "What fictional world or novel's setting would you like to live in?" None, I think. I kid myself that I'd have been a great plainsman or settler, or that I would love "the simple life." In reality, I'm not sure how well I would have fared. I prefer to stick with the devil I know, here in the 2000's. [1] gopher://zaibatsu.circumlunar.space:70/0/~christina/ReadingQuestions.txt