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Leviathan by Scott Westerfield

Name: Anonymous 2009-10-10 22:46

Anyone read this? I saw it on an endcap at Barnes and Noble, but I was sort of on the fence about it.

Obviously I don't expect anything astounding and thought-provoking out of it, but it seemed like an enjoyable read.

Name: Anonymous 2009-10-14 0:06

I saw it too. I read his first Uglies book and didn't like it much, but the illustrations and characters in Leviathan seem interesting.

Name: Anonymous 2009-10-16 20:09

Isn't Leviathan written by Thomas Hobbes?

Name: Anonymous 2009-10-17 6:50

>>3
Shit. I was going to make that joke but forgot. Shit

Name: Anonymous 2009-10-17 7:38

>>4
how is that a joke?

Name: Anonymous 2009-10-20 23:27

Oh, /co/ has gone and made a popular thread about Leviathan. Posted the trailer:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PYiw5vkQFPw

So yeah, the illustrations are really good.

Name: Anonymous 2009-10-21 10:40

>>6
oh my, that's silly.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-12 22:34

Can't find this book in ebook or audiobook form anywhere

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-13 1:59

It seemed like a really cool idea, steampunk/biopunk WWI and whatnot, but I read an excerpt from amazon.com and the writing is so juvenile it's on par with Goosebumps. I'll pass.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-13 8:20

Read Leviathan by Paul Auster.  It's superior.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-13 8:54

>>9

Yeah, it says "Young Adult Fiction" and I always wondered what that really meant. I guess my assumption that it was like Adult Fiction but less intelligent is right.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-13 9:20

>>11
That is one odd definition for young adult fiction. It is works targeted for the young adult crowd, more or less. It is not a categorization for skill.

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-13 14:10

I never understood why a book with younger main characters would automatically be considered "young adult fiction". Based on that logic, shouldn't ASoIaF be considered young adult fiction?

Also, for the part of the book that's really worth it, go to KeithThompsonArt.com

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-13 15:12

>>13
Based on that logic, shouldn't ASoIaF be considered young adult fiction?
Are you trying to say that it isn't?

Name: Anonymous 2009-11-13 18:38

>>12

I am not trying to define Young Adult Fiction. I am merely pointing out that most YA Fiction I have come into contact with appears to be toned-down Adult Fiction.

Not even when I was a "Young Adult" (whatever that really means) did I read YA Fiction. I wanted to read authors that people talked about. Like when you are trying to build up your film knowledge, you don't watch Happy Gilmore. You watch films like Citizen Kane (regardless of whether or not you think it is even a classic) because it is expected that anyone into film has seen it.

And yeah, I think it is often a categorisation of skill. Not that it is meant to be that way. It just is.

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