Something of the Night
Book
Who can say what the night might bring? Mummy tucking you up with Teddy and a cup of Ovaltine?...
The Boiling River
Book
Part of the TED series: The Boiling River This fantastical tale - which sent scores of Spanish...
The Speaker: Sea of Ink and Gold Book 2
Book
The sequel to the critically-acclaimed New York Times bestselling fantasy The Reader, "highly...
fantasy young
Micah's Bride (All The King's Men #9)
Book
Vampires donโt get married. They mate. But for a human, mating isnโt enough. Micah is a...
Paranormal Romance
A Cruel and Shocking Act: The Secret History of the Kennedy Assassination
Book
The questions have haunted our nation for half a century: Was the President killed by a single...
His Dark Materials: BBC Radio Drama Collection: Northern Lights; the Subtle Knife; the Amber Spyglass
Terence Stamp, Philip Pullman, Full Cast and Kenneth Cranham
Book
With a cast including Terence Stamp, Bill Paterson and Kenneth Cranham, these BBC Radio 4 full-cast...
Some Small Magic
Book
From acclaimed author Billy Coffey comes Some Small Magic, "a story of determination and love...
Three Novels by Cesar Aira
Book
Three novels by Cesar Aira combines three short novels by the cult Argentinian writer in one...
From the Great Blasket to America: The Last Memoir by an Islander
Michael J. Carney and Gerald Hayes
Book
Mike Carney, the oldest living native Blasket Islander, was born on the Great Blasket Island in...
LoganCrews (2861 KP) rated Sharp Objects in TV
Nov 26, 2020
Decay in all its forms, *very* HBO - right down to the opening credits sequences - in the best ways. If I have one complaint it's that I wish this were an episode longer to really settle into its final moments before the jaw-dropping rug-pull ending (and maybe I wish it was a little more physically gross when it calls for it) - but I digress, this is phenomenal television all the same. Flynn is as complex a writer as ever and Jean-Marc Vallรฉe is at some of his most fully engrossing. As someone living in a tawdry small town just like this it does a bangup job at showing how those types of areas prey upon their little boys and girls, and bears witness to the differing ways their subsequent rage manifests between each gender. You know yourself much less than everyone else *thinks* they know you, if you aren't peering directly into their eyes you aren't safe from disparaging remarks even from your supposed closest allies - the moment in episode 5 where the camera keeps switching POVs while somebody glares at someone else, who then glares at someone else, who then glares at someone else, etc., etc. does a good job at exemplifying this. Adams, Messina, and particularly Clarkson, Scanlen, Perkins, and Czerny are sublime as these haunted enigmas of people. Gives away some of its themes a touch too on-the-nose later in the game but nonetheless a grim, fragmented, trancelike nightmare of hatred. Magnetic as hell.

