rionaleonhart: final fantasy viii: found a draw point! no one can draw... (you're a terrible artist)
To whoever tried to distract me from the break-in by gifting me The Raven Boys via Amazon (all Amazon would tell me was that it was apparently from a 'Noah?', question mark included): thank you so much! Claiming a Kindle book gift from a different country is, it turns out, a bit of a production; I had to exchange the gift for an amazon.com gift certificate, then change my Kindle device country settings so I could actually order things from amazon.com, then buy the book I was gifted in the first place. But it's possible and it's now been done! Thank you!

[livejournal.com profile] th_esaurus is going to be so pleased; I know she really wants me to read this.

Here is a summary of the impressions I've gained of The Raven Boys, so I can look back and see how accurate or otherwise they prove to be when I actually read it:

- The main character is a girl named Blue.
- The male lead is a boy with a ridiculous name (Richard Gansey III?).
- Gansey is part of a group of boys who are basically the Marauders (he is Fake James Potter). Fake Sirius/Fake Remus is unsurprisingly the most popular pairing (and possibly canon?), but [livejournal.com profile] th_esaurus insists that Fake Remus/Fake James is in fact better. Fake Remus is poor and hates being pitied for it. I assume there's a Fake Peter Pettigrew somewhere.
- The plot is... er, all right, this is where I fall down. The plot is that... there are ley lines? And Fake James nearly died, but then he didn't because he was standing on a ley line. And... he wants to resurrect a dead Scottish king who is buried under the ley line... so he can ask the king why the ley line made him not die? Can that be right? That doesn't seem like it can be right.
- Also there's a prophecy that Blue's true love will die when she kisses him, but apparently that is surprisingly unimportant to the plot. It's all ley lines.
- At some point someone possibly gets possessed by an evil tree.

And those are the impressions I have of this book.


'Everything becomes ten times more homoerotic whenever Derek's on screen,' I observed while we were watching episode 2.01 of Teen Wolf. Later in the episode, Derek spent several minutes holding Scott to his chest and hissing 'This is why we need each other' into his ear. 'Ten times' may have been a conservative estimate.

I say 'homoerotic', but he got very sexual with the asthmatic young lady a few episodes on, so perhaps Derek is just banging his way through the entire cast, regardless of gender. (If I write Teen Wolf fanfiction, this will be the plot.)
rionaleonhart: okami: amaterasu is startled. (NOT SO FAST)
Teen Wolf is on Netflix and I've accepted my fate.

In the first episode of this show, despite the fact that werewolves are generally considered fictional, a character deduces (correctly) that his friend is a werewolf on the following grounds:

- he was bitten by something in the woods.
- he's too good at lacrosse to not be a werewolf.

I'm up to episode six, I think. I'm feeling quite bad for Jackson. He's a bit of an arsehole, yes, but he just wanted to know why Scott was so good at sports! (Hint: he's too good to not be a werewolf.) He didn't ask for any of this scary supernatural nonsense!

Scott and Allison have some cute moments, but I'm having trouble being convinced by their relationship because of the odd, rushed way it developed in the first episode. Allison turns up at the school! Scott stares creepily at her! And then I suppose he wins her over with his amazing werewolf-enhanced lacrosse abilities? Then he abandons her at a party, leaving her to find someone else to drive her home, and she asks him 'UM, WHAT WAS THAT ABOUT' and, rather than saying 'sorry, I was suddenly taken ill' (the socially acceptable form of 'sorry, I was turning into a wolf'), he goes 'lol sorry I can't tell you, forgive me?' And she does! Immediately!

I suppose what I'm saying is that, although Scott seems fine, he made such an odd first impression on Allison that I have trouble believing she wouldn't go 'actually, maybe I shouldn't break my "no boyfriends before college" decision for this guy who stared unsettlingly at me, suddenly left me alone without transport and then responded to my "why did you do that?" with "shrug, can't tell you".'

Maybe she's just a very forgiving person. I suppose I shouldn't judge her for that.

I thought from his first appearance that I wouldn't get along with Stiles, but I actually find him weirdly endearing. Although he does make some terrible decisions. (I also get the impression he's a bit in love with Scott.)

Everyone in this show makes terrible decisions. This is in part because there's a bizarre tendency in Teen Wolf to set up incredibly tense, life-or-death situations... and then focus on how embarrassing they are. Oh, no, Derek's been shot and he's collapsed in the road! ...which is holding up all the traffic, this is totally socially unacceptable, he must be moved as soon as possible. Scott's obtained the remedy that can save Derek's life! Thank goodness; Derek will die within hours without intervention. Better get to him as quickly as possible. But... wait, what's that, Scott? You're a guest in someone's house and you've been invited to stay for dessert? Well, of course you can't refuse; that would be rude.