And 9, 9, 9 for a lost god
Jan. 12th, 2010 05:02 pmOne of the things most guaranteed to throw any sensible person into a flat spin is the discovery that a favourite book is being made into a film.
Sometime this year, a film version of The Eagle of the Ninth will be released.
Will it suck? Will it be great? Will it trample all over one of the best-loved books of my childhood[*]?
I'm waiting anxiously.
Oh, and yes I do know that the book is based on an entirely false premise - what was a reasonably valid historical theory in 1954 is now known to be untrue. Don't care.
[*] and adulthood, if we're strictly honest
Sometime this year, a film version of The Eagle of the Ninth will be released.
Will it suck? Will it be great? Will it trample all over one of the best-loved books of my childhood[*]?
I'm waiting anxiously.
Oh, and yes I do know that the book is based on an entirely false premise - what was a reasonably valid historical theory in 1954 is now known to be untrue. Don't care.
[*] and adulthood, if we're strictly honest
no subject
Date: 2010-01-13 12:13 am (UTC)It looks like OUP are releasing the first three in a single volume, in June.
(Or there's an audiobook of Eagle#9)
no subject
Date: 2010-01-13 12:18 am (UTC)They're all in a single volume (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Three-Legions-Silver-Lantern-Bearers/dp/0140319174), anyway.
no subject
Date: 2010-01-13 12:31 am (UTC)I've just noticed (since you brought my attention to it), that the series page on LibraryThing has two entries at "number 3" (Lantern Bearers and Frontier Wolf). I'll be thinking that's wrong then, but don't know enough to be able to put the right information in.
no subject
Date: 2010-01-13 12:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-01-13 12:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-01-13 12:58 pm (UTC)I'm not sure which of them I've read (or indeed which I own). Must order bookshelves better. Or at all.