Shadow Dream Girl - A Bennet the Sage Psychological Horror Tale
- Kugelfisch
- The white ghost
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Re: Shadow Dream Girl - A Bennet the Sage Psychological Horror Tale
For all anyone knows it's nothing but Lorem Ipsum from page 100 onward.
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Centuries of blood becomes erased!
I am the white ghost!
- VoiceOfReasonPast
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Re: Shadow Dream Girl - A Bennet the Sage Psychological Horror Tale
Or an ASCII rendition of her famous sausage shot.
Autism attracts more autism. Sooner or later, an internet nobody will attract the exact kind of fans - and detractors - he deserves.
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Re: Shadow Dream Girl - A Bennet the Sage Psychological Horror Tale
She probably had chatGPT write it because even she hated by then.
- Kugelfisch
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Re: Shadow Dream Girl - A Bennet the Sage Psychological Horror Tale
I unironically think it would be better if it was. AI isn't just going to insert retarded political angles that make no sense and stick to the three act hero's journey.
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Centuries of blood becomes erased!
I am the white ghost!
- VoiceOfReasonPast
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Re: Shadow Dream Girl - A Bennet the Sage Psychological Horror Tale
The hero's journey is deeply rooted in *white* supremacy.
Autism attracts more autism. Sooner or later, an internet nobody will attract the exact kind of fans - and detractors - he deserves.
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- Kugelfisch
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Re: Shadow Dream Girl - A Bennet the Sage Psychological Horror Tale
Well, Gilgamesh is basically an Arian novel in a way.VoiceOfReasonPast wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2024 7:31 amThe hero's journey is deeply rooted in *white* supremacy.
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Centuries of blood becomes erased!
I am the white ghost!
- ebin namefag
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Re: Shadow Dream Girl - A Bennet the Sage Psychological Horror Tale
Fate once again proves to be the most accurate interpretations of myths.Kugelfisch wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2024 10:58 amWell, Gilgamesh is basically an Arian novel in a way.VoiceOfReasonPast wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2024 7:31 amThe hero's journey is deeply rooted in *white* supremacy.
- Complicity
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Re: Shadow Dream Girl - A Bennet the Sage Psychological Horror Tale
I ain't reading dat shit, nigga.wulfenlord wrote: ↑Thu Oct 10, 2024 12:39 pmBENNETT THE FAG GOT HIS FIRST REVIEW from a cocksucker that helped him through Dark Times ™
SpoilerShowIt’s always interesting when a YouTuber releases a book, especially when they review media. Just because you think you know how to break a story down doesn’t mean you know how to build one. Too many content creators will just churn out a book in one draft and release it, hoping their fanbase doesn’t care about quality and will just fork over some cash. But Bennett White, also known online as Bennett the Sage (host of Anime Abandon), didn’t do that.
In White’s case, he provides a story that seems harmless at first to get your guard down, only to have you grasping at every word by the ending chapters because god dammit, you NEED to know exactly how this ends!
Shadow Dream Girl is about Ian. Ian's life is hell, the kind that would make Jean Paul Sartre offer a cookie and a hug. Stuck in a dead end job with customers he can barely stand, just to go home to pass out in an empty apartment all alone, Ian feels trapped in a dismal life that he doesn’t know how to navigate out of. Ian's life is so boring that he loses track of what month it is, stuck in a worsening spiral of depression, narcolepsy, and fervent self-loathing. And all that changes when fate tosses him a bone as a magnetic redhead walks into the movie rental store Ian works at and starts to change his life... but not for the better.
As a character, Ian is something of an acquired taste. He puts the “pathetic” in “sympathetic”, but he’s not a bad person. He’s just someone with no real direction or drive in life, as if he’s waiting for someone to magically pull him out of his funk. He lives alone in a small apartment. He works in the dying industry of DVD rentals. He has no love life to speak of and even he knows he’s undesirable. He’s somewhat relatable in this way, since I think we’ve all hit that low point where we’re tired of trying and we just need someone to give us a helping hand. But sometimes, as in Ian’s case, that help never arrives.
Surrounding Ian is a small, but thoughtfully crafted set of characters that are all used effectively. Stan is Ian’s movie-loving coworker, something of a movie snob, but very much a realist. The “Brians” are two friendly slackers who laugh and smile a lot, even though they don’t know the alphabet well enough to put DVDs back in order. Luke is a well-meaning, but impatient psychiatrist that Luke sees for his narcolepsy, and chats with about his depression. All these characters are fantastic because in a short amount of time, they each get enough definition to stand on their own AND they are used as reflections of Ian’s life. Stan likes his job and even though it’s a dead end job, he shows that it doesn’t have to be a prison sentence. The Brians live in squalor and should be miserable, but they aren’t. They’re a kind of happy that Ian both can’t understand and can’t achieve without confronting himself. Luke is reality staring Ian in the face, ready with answers that he can’t spell out. Ian has to reach those solutions by himself for them to mean anything.
And then there’s Lisa.
Lisa is the perfect girl, in Ian’s eyes. She’s a beautiful redhead, she makes the first move, she’s open about watching porn, she’s bisexual, and most importantly, without much effort on his part, she thinks Ian is cute. She’s too good to be too. Suspiciously too good to be true. It also doesn’t help that this fiery redhead gets associated with literal fire more than once. She’s where a lot of the plot really starts to turn. And oh man, when you find out what she’s really about…
The book is described as a psychological horror, and it fits as one, but it takes a while for it to build to that point. So much so that for a long while, I was going to claim the book was mislabeled. You’re not gonna get some Evil Within vibes right off the bat, but if you’re patient, the end of the book will have you at the edge of your seat. It’s a lot of setup, but when the reveals start hitting one after the other, you’ll be saying, “Oh, that makes sense,” every few pages.
The town Ian lives in doesn’t have a lot of definition, so the whole place feels like it’s encompassed by a fog, just outside of Ian’s reach. Everything the fog touches is muted. Normally, this would be a problem since you’d want a world to feel lived in, even without the protagonist. However, the psychological aspect of the story shines here, driving home how isolated Ian is. Compounded with his repetitive life, the world should feel dreary. It’s like Silent Hill, but without the monsters.
This is definitely an above average debut novel. A lot of care and attention went into shaping the characters and carving out the plot in just the right way. It even has a verbose lexicon sprinkled throughout the prose, done in such a way that doesn’t sound like the author whipped out a thesaurus for only a chapter or two.
However, I’d be remiss if I didn’t point out some of the issues of the book, minor as they are. There are some formatting issues with misaligned indentations, and some sloppy prose now and then. At one point, a sentence reads, “He grabbed his shoulders and shoved,” where “he” and “his” refer to two different people. It isn’t a huge or prevalent problem, but it is a stumble.
And while I didn’t see this as a mistake, some people might be turned off by how long it takes for the plot to get going. Shadow Dream Girl required a lot of setup, showing us Ian’s routines for the first quarter of the book when things really start to escalate. Some people might want something with a faster pace, but I would argue that all the setup is necessary for the payoff in the climax.
In conclusion, this is a daring book. It breaks a few writing conventions that I don’t want to spoil, but the way White is able to utilize repetition and make Ian’s tedium palpable was a high risk/high reward stylistic choice. It reads like it started as a tongue-in-cheek love letter to retail workers, but it ended in a surprisingly gripping adventure, one I’m damn glad I took.
This book gets an 8/10 from me.
- VoiceOfReasonPast
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Re: Shadow Dream Girl - A Bennet the Sage Psychological Horror Tale
How important are Goodreads reviews compared to Amazon ones, anyways?
At least neither has tits, I guess.
You know Fate/Zero is just as Fail/Shit as the rest when GIRUGAMESH is the twink and Alexander the bear, when it ought to be the other way around.ebin namefag wrote: ↑Sat Oct 12, 2024 4:38 amFate once again proves to be the most accurate interpretations of myths.
At least neither has tits, I guess.
Autism attracts more autism. Sooner or later, an internet nobody will attract the exact kind of fans - and detractors - he deserves.
-Yours Truly
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-Yours Truly
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- ebin namefag
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Re: Shadow Dream Girl - A Bennet the Sage Psychological Horror Tale
Patrick Tomlinson tried to sue the internet over them.VoiceOfReasonPast wrote: ↑Sat Oct 12, 2024 4:05 pmHow important are Goodreads reviews compared to Amazon ones, anyways?
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