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Stieg Larsson's Millennium Trilogy

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OK still book one.

Holy cow Batman. I love the way Lisbeth controls her golf clubs :roflmao:. I knew he was a baddie, I just didn't know how. Then the flight to Australia, OMG.

I'm just at the last couple of chapters and I'll finish it tomorrow.

Now, I'm sad as I haven't got book 2 yet. KP shows signs of impatience - grrrrrr.
 
I'm wallowing a bit too KP, still partway through the 3rd book and having trouble with my attention span these past couple of days.

Lizbeth really is very cool...
 
OMG, I've just finished book 1. Amazing. The ending was wrong though, being an old softie, Blomkvist and Salander should have ended up together :inlove::rolleyes:.

I've just blown the budget and ordered book 2 - oh dear.
 
It all comes together much better KP... Lisbeth has a lot to work through IMO, I think if her and blomkvist got together it would have ended in disaster, worse that what happens to Lisbeth due to her own feeling, yet unbeknownst to Blomkvist.

I'm getting impatient for the movie series to arrive... I want to watch the entire thing on the screen now.
 
I want to watch the entire thing on the screen now.

I can't do subtitles, but I have ordered the Daniel Craig (English v) from the movie rental I subscribe to. I've also told H, he should read the books.

I now can't wait for book 2 to arrive. Although I'm enjoying the non stressful, trashy romp 'Jump' by Jilly Cooper.
 
I admit to some "hang on, where is my happy ending" feelings at the end as well - so reflective of her character though that she should fight so hard and tenaciously about so many things, but be so quickly and completely deterred by the prospect of being muscled out by another woman. I agree with Anthony though, given the way the series moves from here, it is better that she walked away, the rest of the story wouldn't have worked if she hadn't.

Book 2 is worth not eating for a week KP if that helps balance the budget!!

Oh, and did I mention my feelings for Daniel Craig? Hmmm, yep, I think I did, but am happy to do so again if anyone is fuzzy about it... darn sure I wouldn't be walking away quietly like Lizbeth did - Berger would have found a golf club-shaped hole in the back of her head if she'd dared to try to wisk him away.
 
Just watched this series on DVD... really excellent, though after reading the books there is seriously so much missing and a lot of changes in the movie series compared to the plot the book portrays. The basics are still there, but so much detail gone.

Nonetheless, I will no doubt watch all three discs again in the next day or two. It was actually far more enjoyable than I envisaged in Swedish.
 
Nonetheless, I will no doubt watch all three discs again in the next day or two.
It's like dancing with the Devil when it comes to Anthony.

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Tomorrow he has chores to do and if I get home from work and my computer is not fixed like he said he would, he will be spending days with me at the hospital after my meltdown instead of watching any DVD. Between books and DVD's I have a full time job competing for attention.

Seriously... since the Hunger Games I feel like a widow.

And yes, I commented on his post in person to which I was told "you should be working and not on the forum"....

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The movies almost never recapture the intricacies of a novel's plotline, I suppose it's difficult to weave it all into a manageable-length film, but it is always so disappointing to lose so much of that richness and detail. I often shy away from watching the movies of my favourite books as a result...


I had heard that the Swedish films were more accurate to the novels than the Hollywood remake though, so it sounds rather bleak for the latter if this is the case.

I've made some further progress through book 3 and Lizbeth's trial has just started. I suspect I'll knock it over tonight.

And speaking of the Hunger Games, I have them ready to go just as soon as I'm done with Millennium. Only a few months late with all of these, but that would seem to be the story of my life.
 
Well, as day dawns, I've just finished book 3.

The final chapters certainly filled me with a sense of unfolding triumph and satisfaction as justice was methodically and meticulously delivered. All of those earlier chapters of wallowing planning and preparation paid off and tied the story into an excellent and, for the most part, deeply satisfying tale.
A very complex, active mind concocted this trilogy, and I admire his skill.

The romantic in me (yes, apparently there is one there somewhere) couldn't help but feel a twang of annoyance at Lizbeth's refusal to deal with her feelings for Blomkvist once and for all. It hung in the air as the unanswered question and the unresolved plotline throughout the whole series, and even the very ending, which apparently constituted resolution of this issue, left more questions than it answered. Then again, it perhaps couldn't have been any other way without doing gross Hollywood injustice to Lizbeth's character, and so while I confess to some mild disappointment, I expect my irritation would have been greater if the author had sold her out in this way in search of the happy romance-seeking audience.

In terms of Lizbeth's character, I thought that its careful mastery was one of the true gems from the series. I accept that part of my appreciation for her comes from a little too much identification, but I did think he created and maintained her in a very true manner throughout the series. Personally, it was the scene with her lawyer dropping her home after the trial that stuck with me as the saddest, yet the most symbolically accurate summation of her character.

The finale with the nail gun exceeded all expectations.

I thought Berger was irrelevant by book 3 and I kept waiting in vain for there to be some greater significance to her subplot.

The dismantling of the psychiatrist in the courtroom was pure gold and psychological dismemberment. Very, very satisfying, and cathardic, given my feelings towards the profession...

All in all, an excellent, enthralling, intellectually stimulating series I would thoroughly recommend to anyone who likes something they can really get their teeth into.

On a more personal note, it's been a long, long time since I read a book, a long time since I've been able to dedicate myself to a task that used to be 2nd nature to me. I'd even had these books quite literally for months before I could bring myself to get started.
But I found real pleasure, escape and reward in emersing myself in this story, and it has actually kept me trucking through some very very dark days and nights in the past couple of weeks. Part of me is sad and scared at its having ended for that reason, though thankfully I have the Hunger Games to kick off with now.

Glad I did finally mobilise myself to action on the bookclub, and I hope to keep pace with it a little better in the future.

Maddog
 
Bless you Maddog, I love you BUT I haven't read your post :p. I am still waiting for book 2 to arrive so I didn't want to spoil the surprise :eek: .
 
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