What’s on your bookshelf?: Johanna Kasurinen of mouthwash

What's on your bookshelf?: Johanna Kasurinen of mouthwash

Hello Reader, who is also a reader, and welcome to return to the week – our regular Sunday conversation with the selection of great people in the book! While cleaning under the bed recently, I once again discovered a copy of the smallest physical book I ever owned. It was a small version of my hand. What a great thing. I mean, I really haven’t read it, but the wisdom owns at least a very small book, what I think is the main idea.

This week, it was Johanna Kasurinen, the strange writer and artist of the organ none other than RPS 2024 Goty, tears! Congratulations Johanna! If we have a nose in your bookshelf?

What are you reading?

Hell Yeah! I am very happy to be able to make this series, thank you for me!

I tend to read books that can be classified as studying stories that I am doing or interested in working in the future. Therefore, it is a lot of non -fictional things about quite specific topics. It is a way to justify wasting time when reading, be real. Right now I am going through ninety percent of everything of Rose George as well as the destruction: A collection of the first accounts of the 1939-1945 battle of Ian Hawkins. It is for a personal project that I have polished in my mind for many years.

Some of my previous reading readers were reminded by a research thought that when you were here, the doc Bradford B. Brown as well as master the Soviet cooking art: a memoir of food and the desire of Anya Von Bremzen. These people were trapped with me outside the project that I considered due to their wittyness and the peculiarities of the detailed experiences in the anecdote. It never fails to beat me how the stories really can often be bizarre and unbelievable than anything climbing as I try to cook with the novel.

What did you read for the last time?

A re -reading of shine, really! I have long been a big fan of the film adaptation and generally a big fan of Stephen King’s work but it has been a long time since I read the book. I am also in the perfect context for it, isolated in the middle of Nowhere Finland for a good segment of summer. When I read it for the first time, I was surprised because I really liked the novel for its aspects that were distinctly different from the adaptation, came to it as a fan of the movie first. Portrait of addiction and all anger and circle thinking pulls one person down into something that cannot be realized is particularly outstanding and reliable. Certainly one of my favorite items, and a truly interesting case study about how a story can be told by very separate methods and completely different means with such high standards.

What are you keeping your eyes on the next?

I have had a sequence of short stories since they made good walks. A few that I care about now is the orange world of Karen Russell, who seems to be offshore and weird with issues that are likely to worry about. I am always disappointed by that. Another prominent thing is the life ritual of Sayaka Murata, I really like her new convenience store woman, especially because of how sharp and similarity so I am interested in reading something described as weird and darker.

What is the quote or scene from a book that is most attached to you?

But he knows he won’t. How much it said, that line; How much it told me.

– Charles R. Jackson, the weekend has died

Which book do you find yourself bothering your friends to read?

Anyone who wants to do or like to consume the independent horror games or the horror content of Media Lost Media, unexpectedly, I will rush through your floor board and prosper on the leaf house of Mark Z. Danielewski.

You cannot buy a Digital version of House of Left. When I first realized I couldn’t download it, I felt uncomfortable and inconvenient. But that’s for a good reason, it defies everything about how to tell stories often down the format of the words on the page. Embarking on a copy that feels like a part of the process, like the story starts just by having a physical book. Don’t look for anything about it, just go into blindness, suffering. It is overwhelming, confusing, rambling and completely chaotic but absolutely unbelievable. One of the number.

My copy is now on the bookshelf in the house with my other books, but while those thorns are lined up neatly, suitable, in their exact position, I can not help but see The house of the leaf As a single -numbered entity glow Instead I.

To read faster, I advise people to try Flowers for Algernon of Daniel Keyes. It is a major class in the way of breaking the rules of language and writing a punch package through absolute technical creation and prose control. A brief, entertainment and gloomy story of people stay with you.

Want to see someone adapted to a game?

To be honest, nothing comes out immediately. Add to the game in an existing story is a difficult prospect for the most ideal that the story and mechanics are holding hands from the beginning. We had this problem at Frong Organ, where I had a series of short stories that have not been published in my repertoire that I think is strong concepts but it always belongs to how to turn this into a game to raise it? It may be difficult, but of course there are many great games from books, like Parasite Eve or I had no mouth, and I had to scream. It is interesting to see these types of adaptation and consider how the mechanism is approached. What is inherited from source documents and nothing.

I think that instead of watching the books adapted directly from the book, I want to see the original title inspired by a wider, more diverse source. Especially when it comes to books including difficult or mature topics. It should not be limited to just the game. The book can definitely inspire mechanics as much as the story. There is a pile of diseases with potential that has not been exploited there. Make a game that is inspired by the theme from Lord of the Flies and machines by training. Why not?

Oh, so you claim that you are “happy” as “making this series” and you did not “name” each only book “ever written in human history” as “very secret target” of this column. Typical guests. Not sure why I continue to invite them really. However, they will be another “next week”, no doubt. Books for now!

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