June 03, 2006

Posted by: Pixy Misa at 12:39 PM | Comments (13) | Add Comment | Trackbacks (Suck)
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at June 03, 2006 02:53 PM (+rSRq)
Posted by: Wonderduck at June 03, 2006 03:04 PM (7+BNY)
Possibly The Jawa Report. There are a number of Munuvians who aren't, how shall I put this, the most practiced of diplomats, so it could be any of a number of people.
Posted by: Pixy Misa at June 03, 2006 03:21 PM (cThdm)
Either way, thank you for your efforts at bringing MuNuvia back up and running, Pixy... A Winner Is You!
Posted by: Wonderduck at June 03, 2006 05:26 PM (zBXYv)
Much appreciated.
Baiting comicbook fanboyz is too easy. Hardly a challenge.
Posted by: Andrew at June 04, 2006 02:01 AM (P5BFK)
I'd be interested in whatever comments you have on it, again whenever you do get to it.
Posted by: HC at June 04, 2006 05:19 AM (Bgud/)
hidden order underpinning the entire series." It was stated as
far back as the werewolf novel, that something was fishy in Chicago.
Too many tomes, magic belts, and other weird things showing up; in fact
the very first novel opens up with an obvious mystery: who supplied the
book on demon summoning to the killer that targeted Harry?
But "Yay!" for the return of the Carpenters, I agree!
It was definately interesting to see Lily and Fix again; I'd always felt that Summer Knight was one of the weaker books in the series, but they were good here.
Posted by: ubu at June 04, 2006 07:47 AM (ruy7Y)
Do you think that Butcher had planned this from the beginning? I believe that he started with a character, a genre, and a style (wizard, noir, two-fisted) and just threw problems at Dresden for the first few books. Afterward, it dawned on him that he had an indefinitely viable series on his hands, and he began to lay foundations to carry it forward.
He might have been working on this overplot as far back as kicking off the war with the Red Court in book three (see also, Leaninsidhe's/Mab's athame), but I wouldn't bet on it really coalescing much before book six or so, and maybe book seven.
This isn't really a criticism - his reconciliation of past problems with present conspiracies was quite clever, and I can honestly say that the series is improving visibly from book to book at this point. I'm particularly excited about the turn of events with SPOILER, as I think SPOILER is going to be particularly interesting character going forward, given SPOILER's SPOILER and SPOILER.
Incidentally, don't you wan't to know who used SPOILER on the gates of SPOILER? Or who was driving the car when it SPOILER?
Ah, Pixy - read the thing soon, to spare my caps-lock key, if not for its considerable merits.
Posted by: HC at June 04, 2006 01:29 PM (Bgud/)

Posted by: Pixy Misa at June 04, 2006 03:52 PM (cThdm)
I'm disappointed that the Powers That Be have SPOILER but then an old 80's P.I. series occurs to me... and no, I don't mean Remington Steele; I mean the other one with acouple.
Posted by: ubu at June 06, 2006 05:05 AM (dhRpo)
I think that I know who fixed the SPOILER, but that's only conjecture so far.
Harry's SPOILER that he has been keeping is due for a plotline - but then, so it the other SPOILER. Also, there's the suggestion that his duties will be expanded to include SPOILER, as well as the certainty that he'll have to spend a lot of time working on SPOILER'S SPOILER. All in all, no shortage of future plotlines.
I'm not up on 80's detective shows, but I think that the PTB pretty much had to have SPOILER. Besides, it's a return to the thematic roots of the series.
Posted by: HC at June 06, 2006 07:25 AM (Bgud/)
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