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I've not read In The Abyss (well, now I have). It shows because when I read the title I somehow associated it with more of a scenario you'd find in a Lovecraft story. Idk why but I was somewhat expecting some sort of gigantic monstrosity hidden in the dark depths. xD
Granted, Lovecraft too made use of some sort of fish people. So having a society of reptile-humanoid creatures at the bottom of the ocean isn't too far from that. I kind of wish there had been a little bit more, maybe some more exploration of the very religious lifestyle they lived. I know that there was a comparison with how people at the time would have reacted if a random object where to fall from the sky. So a lot of it comes down to filling the blanks by yourself. But I'm still sad we didn't get much out of the second journey down to the bottom floor. For all we know he might have never reached his goal. I'm not criticizing the open ending, btw. I think I would have liked to get a little bit more before the ending; instead of a quick summary of "he went down again and we've never heard of him again". But maybe that's a good thing because it means I felt invested? xD
A while ago I bought a collection of Jules Verne stories that I've been reading through quite a bit. I thought that maybe Frritt-Flacc was part of it, but it wasn't. I looked up a translation and put it onto my ebook reader. I appreciate the app, but I really don't like reading stuff on my phone all that much. ^^"
The story of a greedy doctor who only does his services for the sake of making money. I have to admit, I didn't like this one as much as I hoped I would. Maybe I've read too many better J.V. stories at this point? Maybe it's that image of this Christmas movie whose name slipped my mind (the one with the old man and the three ghosts) that just stuck in my mind throughout the entire time?
It definitely feels like one of his not so great works, tbh.
Spoiler:
Granted, Lovecraft too made use of some sort of fish people. So having a society of reptile-humanoid creatures at the bottom of the ocean isn't too far from that. I kind of wish there had been a little bit more, maybe some more exploration of the very religious lifestyle they lived. I know that there was a comparison with how people at the time would have reacted if a random object where to fall from the sky. So a lot of it comes down to filling the blanks by yourself. But I'm still sad we didn't get much out of the second journey down to the bottom floor. For all we know he might have never reached his goal. I'm not criticizing the open ending, btw. I think I would have liked to get a little bit more before the ending; instead of a quick summary of "he went down again and we've never heard of him again". But maybe that's a good thing because it means I felt invested? xD
A while ago I bought a collection of Jules Verne stories that I've been reading through quite a bit. I thought that maybe Frritt-Flacc was part of it, but it wasn't. I looked up a translation and put it onto my ebook reader. I appreciate the app, but I really don't like reading stuff on my phone all that much. ^^"
Spoiler:
The story of a greedy doctor who only does his services for the sake of making money. I have to admit, I didn't like this one as much as I hoped I would. Maybe I've read too many better J.V. stories at this point? Maybe it's that image of this Christmas movie whose name slipped my mind (the one with the old man and the three ghosts) that just stuck in my mind throughout the entire time?
It definitely feels like one of his not so great works, tbh.