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Friday, 13 April 2012

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TGIF is hosted by Ginger at Greads! This week's discussion is about
Musical Stories
If you could read a book about any song, which song would you love to see written down in story form?

This is a seriously tough question, because I think most music has to come from a deep place. (Most good music, anyway.)  There's always a story behind every lyric, and if you really wanted to, you could write it.  That said, I have 3 that I would love to have formed into a book. All of them are fairly popular (one VERY popular), and all are tortured/sad/heartbreaking in their own way; but still, I think some truly emotional and touching stories could be made.

Damien Rice - Cannonball

John Mayer - Slow Dancing In A Burning Room

Adele - Rolling in the Deep

What musical story would you want to read?
Leave me your link and I'll come check it out!

Follow Friday is hosted by Alison Can Read and Parajunkee's View, meant to spotlight two blogs and allows bloggers to link up and meet other fabulous bookish friends and share the Following love!

This week's spotlight blogs are: Book Briefs & Gizmo's Reviews

And the question of the week is:
What is one book that you would be nervous to see a movie adaption of because you think the movie could never live up to the book?

I said it in my review, but I am absolutely terrified for the movie adaptation of The Fault in Our Stars by John Green. It's such a beautiful, emotional, epic read that you feel as you go from paragraph to paragraph, page to page.  And it's not really that I don't think they'd be able to do Hazel, Augustus and Isaac justice (there's a chance they could); but it's more that I think all the visual cues of sets and scenes would detract from the experience of reading it. I can't say more in case people have not read it (what are you waiting for??), but there are very specific parts where I feel a movie would ruin it because of surroundings.

Though truthfully, my answer is every book, EVER. I'm just not a fan of movie adaptations. Some are great (The Notebook, Gone with the Wind, every Pride & Prejudice adaptation, etc), but wholly, the book  is always, always better. Movies almost always ruin something a reader can get from the book. And really, movie adaptations are poor excuses for people not to read; I can't tell you how many students I had in my tutoring days that said they saw the movie so they could write the report. Absolutely disgraceful.

What book should never be a movie?
Leave me your link and I'll hop by!
And of course I'd love to return a follow if you are kind enough to follow me :)

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