1. City of Dreams and Nightmare - Ian Whates
2. 'Salem's Lot - Stephen King
3. Dracula - Bram Stoker
4. I Hate Everyone - Matthew Dibenedetti
5. 11/22/63 - Stephen King
6. The Picture of Dorian Gray - Oscar Wilde
7. Jurassic Park - Michael Crichton
I have to say, as much as I love the movie, the book is better (business as usual though, you ask me). So much more detail. It really sucks you in.
One thing that struck me though, is that I now see where a lot of the influence for the original Genesis game came from. From using tranquilizer darts as a primary weapon, to the river rafting levels, and the constant harassment from the T-Rex hunting Grant like it has a vendetta.
I enjoyed having more characters around. Hammond is certainly a very different guy though, and frankly he's annoying. The kids too, are more obnoxious in the book than the movie, which is impressive.
Still, it was really good. I just started on The Lost World as well.
Key-Glyph wrote:Are you purposely reading the origins of so many horror tales? I became obsessed with doing that in high school after reading Frankenstein and seeing how different the source material was from the pop-culture perception. I read Dracula for that reason and loved it like you did.
In that vein I am going to plug H.G. Wells' War of the Worlds to you, because it is absolutely awesome, IMHO.
Honestly, no, it just kind of worked out that way, as both were books I've been meaning to read for some number of years. I also loved Frankenstein after I read it years ago. Its fantastic, and I've been meaning to get back to it again for the pleasure of it. There's another case where the source material is far, far better than the modern interpretation.
Which reminds me, after I finished Dracula I started poking around for the best movie version to watch, because I wanted more. Apparently
Bram Stroker's Dracula from the early 90s is the best and most accurate option, and yet they still jacked it up by making Mina Harker a love interest to Dracula. Which is nonsense. Dracula is not supposed to be a sympathetic character. I still want to see it, but that bugs me.
Anyway, the reading list does mostly fit together nicely doesn't it? So, I'll definitely take your advice and check out War of the Worlds. Right now I'm in the midst of both The Lost World and The Three Musketeers, so after I finish one of those (it'll certainly be the former), War of the Worlds is up next.
