An underrated book in this same genre is Blood Music by Greg Bear, published in 1985. It's about a geneticist who modifies human blood cells to be able to learn, leading to super-intelligent clusters of cells that escape and transform the entire landscape, including all of humanity. It's an incomprehensibly alien intelligence that comes from our own cells instead of outer space. Fantastic book.
I loved this series and it’s one of cinema’s great tragedies that the movie didn’t make enough money to get the trilogy made. Very underrated. Thank for covering it! 👍
One of the women should have been a man imo. Casts are always better when they’re diverse. Tom Cruise, Jake gyllenhal, Ed Norton. Anyone but Chris Pratt imo lol. I know those actors are expensive, but just offer a few points. Would have helped the box office a great deal imo.
@@SmartWentCrazy. Its never good when its done for the sake of itself. I love diverse casts dont get me wrong but diversity for the sake of diversity is just shoehorn-ish
Shall we start a petition? I am sure 100,000-1,000,000 sigs would be enough? There are so many easy places to farm sigs from to make this pop to some new or experimental producer? Just...mayve
@@SmartWentCrazy. No, not only were they all women in the book, but it was a conscious, explained decision. Each expedition was an experiment to see how Area X responded to different variables. The previous expedition, which the main character's husband was a part of, was all men, this one was all women.
Gotta say, this has always been a very comfortable channel for me. I love Science Fiction and Quinn has impeccable taste. I've literally stopped videos halfway through so I could go and read the books lol. I hope Quinn continues to grow, and find wonderful Science Fiction for us to read.
seconded. i'm not sure if this is an especially new channel or one that's just been under the radar for a while but as someone who doesn't have a lot of time to read, being able to get interesting thematic summaries from this channel has been a blessing
The Southern Reach trilogy was one of the most invested I've been in books in years. I just devoured them. I felt a little empty for a few weeks after I finished them, because I didn't want to leave the world it built yet. It was just the perfect amount of mystery. I tell people the books are essentially about boundary disollution writ large. Boundaries between beings, their environment, even between concepts and percepts. It's like an archetypical psychedelic trip: Beautiful, horrifying, fascinating, and profoundly mysterious and alien, all at once.
Is it anything like the movie? The movie was almost really good, but they made it about a broken couple and used the anomaly to "reset" their marriage and... it was dumb for that.. lol I just wanted a sci fi story that's sci fi. I don't mind love sub-stories on the side to contribute to exposition, but that was the "thing" about the movie and just ruined the whole experience for me...
@@nanomachines2985 the film was less of an adaption and more of a completely different re-imagining. i get your interpretation of the plot and while i dont agree with it i understand the disappointment. the novels are basically entirely different. you could read 10 pages of the first book and realize that these are completely separate works. i do like the movie but the trilogy is on a different level.
This trilogy and one book by Stephen King are the only books to captivate me and leave me feeling empty for weeks, just rethinking everything, trying to see if I missed something. 11/22/63 is the King book btw.
I really like this setting when put up against a lot of Lovecraft stuff. I know Lovecraft's cosmic horrors are "supposed" to be indifferent to us and the horror is "supposed" to come from understanding our smallness and insignificance in the bigger picture, but the bigger picture nevertheless feels inherently hostile and mean. Here, there is still the feeling of horror and insignificance, but there is also adaptation on our part, to some degree. Coming into contact with it changes us, but does not necessarily destroy (all) of us. Kind of reminds me of the All Tomorrows setting, where cosmic horrors conquer and rule over humanity in a horrorshow of torture and genetic mutilation for forty million years, but something of our distant descendants still remains and manages to make a good future for themselves way way way down the line, even if it's an alien future to what we imagine now.
@@Notremah isn’t it awesome? Especially during our timeline of smartphones, audiobooks, and constant content. Escape into a book and reading feels amazing.
The moaning creature is a fascinating one, because area x seems to have externalised the bizarre multilayered things done to the psychologist's mind by Lowry. The idea that it regularly sheds its face and skin as a result of its own identity crisis is just horrific.
Thank you for this. Have read so many accounts that seem to have lost this, though it seemed rather explicit to me. These types of things, however, seem to be the fun of delving into this fanbase & I frequently lay on the other side, having glossed over details that seem like they should have been obvious to me once/only once another has pointed them out. Fwiw, also Whitby outside of Southern Reach was not a clone. He got Saul'd by the flower fasho, which sucks because he did deserve a break after having to kill his double (which disappeared like normal humans are not otherwise shown to do).
@@garfieldandfriends453 That series is a work of art. Reading between the lines is arguably the point of it, because looking directly at the thing at the core of the story is impossible given its nature. Fantastic stuff.
@@hammbannana1038 I'm no zoomer but I know knowledge is power and I've seen how pathetic the people without it are. You would would do well to listen more than speak seeing as your words are worth less than wind.
Honestly, it’s really amazing that we live in a time where we can consume so much content (I know that can be bad, too depending on the content). Also, if you do ever have time, PLEASE read the books. The writing style alone is definitely worth your time :)
I read the series after your first video on the topic. It was not the most satisfying in terms of conclusions but I loved the writing style and world building. Glad you revisited the series!
As apocalypses go, Area is pretty gentle. For all its horrors it is beautiful. It unmakes everything it touches and reforms it into something new and beautiful and terrible. It does so with no frame of human reference and no goal we can understand. I think I wouldn't mind that kind of catharsis
I have to let you know of my gratitude for having your channel. For once,as an old 68 year old Science Fiction ,geek, I guess..I have a place to go to beat my ideas of books against your descriptions and explanations. My first books were from Edgar Rice Burroughs ,Roger Zelazny ,Phillip Jose Farmer, HG Wells, The Great HP LoveCraft, H Rider Haggard, August Derleth. Etc. If you want to go back in time, read 9 Princes in Amber..again thank you for your channel.
I'm gonna avoid watching this whole thing bc spoilers, but I just started Borne by Vandermeer and I'm really enjoying it. I have a coworker who absolutely adores the Southern Reach trilogy, having gone so far as to get a tattoo from it, and I'm considering getting either this or the Three Body Problem next, thanks in no small part to the passion of people like you and her
Ooooooh Borne is such a unique book! I don't understand the ending but I greatly enjoyed the ride. I think you may experience writing-style-whiplash if you go from VanderMeer to Liu, but wishing you a great reading journey nonetheless!
If you like borne get the southern reach. I started with the latter, loved it so much I had to read more from the author and ended up loving borne too, both the book and the little guy. Also if you finish borne and wanna know more about that universe read The strange bird and Dead astronauts, in that order, as dead astronauts is a narrated puzzle and you need all the pieces you can get beforehand. Right now I'm reading Perdido street station, which also gets a recommendation sharing the genre and more or less writing style. The three body problem on the other hand while it poses interesting questions and it gets a little intriguing I just couldn't finish, the chinese to english translation makes it read like a shitty anime and I just can't get invested.
So pleased to see Quinn cover this excellent series. I know a bunch of people (Indeed, I’m one of them) that read new sci-if because of Quinn’s videos, so him giving it more attention is great.
I'm so glad you're covering the annihilation series, I already binged most of your other videos but I LOVE Jeff Vandermeer's writing and the universe that he built in this trilogy, I absolutely love it:) I should reread them in the correct order tbh. I always read trilogies out of order, it's a disgusting habit 💀😂
35:55 The thought of Area X being a way for communicating really captivated me. I never even considered the possibility. I love it when I read through these books and stories and come back to watch the videos months down the line just to be drawn back in. Thank you so much for making such amazing content. It truly opens my world up and I LOVE IT!!!
Awesome explanation, Quinn. Went into this expecting to watch it over four days in 15 minute chunks, ended up going through the whole thing in one sitting. You sure know how to tell a story!
I've read this trilogy 3 times already. I just love it and I wanted to make sure I didn't miss anything that might have been lost on me the first time. I'm really happy you chose to talk about Vandermeer's books. I consider him one of the best science fiction authors of the 21st century.
Hell yeah knew I had to finish the series after your first video! Fun fact VanderMeer is local to the Tallahassee area and there is a wildlife park nearby that matches pretty nicely to what Area X is described as. There is even a walking trail recommended by him if you look up St. Marks Area X
@Brody Miller I can't add links to this but if you Google St. Marks Area X there is an article where they interview the author and he recommends the 12-mile Deep Creek trail in the Wildlige Refuge. There is a lighthouse at St Marks as well but he mentioned he reimagined it at the end of that trail. I had to dig a bit for it, but you can find a map of that specific trail under the primitive trails in the Offroad Trails > Primitive trails section of that same website
It's important to remember that the 11th's Psychologist was Lawrey's weapon with stings coiled up in his brain...the "stings" may have caused the misadaptation.
I have come to deeply appreciate your dedication. It's not just concept that you present, but the thought of ramifications and potential for change that could yet be. Please continue to do what you do. The world sorely needs more who think like you do.
Ah I've been waiting for you to finish the southern reach series so you can make a proper video about it. When I finished the book I desperately wanted to hear a proper analysis of them but could find nothing, so I'm very glad you made this.
Great work as always Quinn! I would suggest you to give the Borne/Strange Bird/Dead Astronauts trilogy a shot too when you make the time... I found the last book particularly touching in its imagery and concepts, truly one of VanderMeer's best :)
I finally caught up on the whole series, after initially getting bogged down on the second one Authority, and it's a slow burn, but really satisfying in the end. I am looking forward to a re-read with the entire shape of the plot fresh in my mind.
And that terrible evacuation and drive from Florida, Control knowing Area X had burst the Border and was beginning its consumption of the Earth behind him, franticly checking the radio to see if there was any emergency broadcast or alert yet. Chills!!!
I have seen the movie and loved it. It is indeed a great example of impersonal cosmic horror. I was already considering reading the books after seeing the film. Now that I have seen this, I have put it back on my bucket list. The themes of the story are amazingly mindbending.
Your one of my all time favorite people on UA-cam. I love your style of videos. I love the topic you discuss. Thank You for your hard work, i appreciate it, we all appreciate it.
So glad this series is getting some love...The movie actually killed some of it because it is so different from the tone of the books. Authority is so awesome in the way it world builds and creates the Ghostbird character and Control. Acceptance brings it all together with the POV of the Director/Psychologist and the Lighthouse Keeper. What is Area X and the Crawler? Something beyond biology and mechanics created by a race so advanced that they had defeated all barriers of dimensional travel. They had created a creature that could completely mimic and create a new environment out of the building blocks of another world. It was designed to make that world perfect so it absorbed and eradicated any pollution. It seemed to consider Humans pollution and changed them on a genetic level. It sent probes out into the world beyond the "border" and colonized The Southern Reach using it as an incubator. The Crawler utilized the Lighthouse keeper as a connection, both to the Earth and to open the connections to vast other worlds and dimensions thru the words and the creatures the words are made up of. The Novel's language is so poetic and encompassing it is a joy to read or hear. I have the full Area X audiobook and have my device play it as bedtime stories and have been doing this for 3 years now. I'm sure I'm leaving some stuff out, but there is sooooo much in these books that is said and unsaid...as Chaney says at one point..."you need to hear what we have to say, and how we say it"...that is a key statement in this book. How is it said? Thanks for you complete coverage, was waiting for this! Also will you finish the 'Three Body' review of the Chinese TV program? I finished watching that and was blown away by how good it is. I think the Netflix version has a real challenge on its' hands to meet it!
I ended up seeing the movie first and loved it. But now after reading the books I see how I would have been dissapointed by how much was changed. Now I just treat the movie as a coincidentally similar story that is awesome in its own right, but has very different underlying vibes compared to the books. Strangely enough for me the movie took a more fatalistic angle, whereas the books I kinda felt uplifted by the change that area x ultimately spread
I'm interested in your interpretation of the area x catalyst being created by an advanced race. I just assumed it was nature itself, like a space spore that carried genes from whatever planet it evolved on. I'm also not a super close reader though, might have missed something
I'm glad to see you covering VanderMeer Quinn! I've been hoping that someone would make some deep dive Area X content, because the world is so enthralling but there are so many mysteries. I'm grateful to have some deep-dive content, because it's not easy to unravel all of the riddles in the series. The broad strokes of the plot are plain enough, but a lot of the details are not easy to piece together. Similar to Gene Wolfe in that way. But while there is a ton of great Wolfe content, I've been unable to find much on VanderMeer.
I enjoyed this trilogy a great bit. Almost all my audiobook choices this past year have come recommended by this channel. The only series I'm not sure of yet is Safehold, I was drawn in by the Gababa , but I'm staying for ship logistics. At least I've stayed for two books of ship building logistics.
I am so excited that Quinn has done this trilogy!! I think this is the most thought-provoking and satisfying series I've read in my 40 years of loving sci-fi stories and novels.
I think one of the keys to understanding Southern Reach & Central comes from a line in the movie (I can’t remember if it was also in the novels) where a character cynically observes “Half the people here sleep curled up in the fetal position.” The researchers at Southern Reach are scared. They’ve been trying for years to figure out what’s happening in Area X and they STILL don’t have a clue and it’s making them desperate. Take the 12th expedition: they make it an all-female expedition because-up until now-all the previous expeditions were male or mixed-gender. That’s not a plan! That’s randomly throwing stuff against a wall to see what sticks. And even as they get more and more desperate to learn something-anything- about Area X, they still send their people in with hypnotic kill-words programmed into their brains so that their handlers can make them end themselves... No wonder they find evidence that two of the previous expeditions (apparently) fought a pitched gun battle with each other at the lighthouse! Southern Reach is a toxic agency of control that is flailing around madly as it realizes control is impossible. There’s one scene in ‘Authority’ when (I think) the director discovers that one of the SR’s scientists is hiding in a crawl space every night instead of going back to his room. On the walls of that space, the scientist has painted a deranged mural featuring all the other scientists of Southern Reach. As horrified as the director is by the discovery, the scientist himself is almost catatonic at being discovered. The Southern Reach are scientists in the hands of authoritarian government that has reached the edge of what they can control, and are screaming into the void beyond.
Your channel is amazing and reminds me of what UA-cam is supposed to be. Sharing the things you love IS sharing Yourself. Thank you for sharing Quinn, hope you continue for many years to come.
Havent read the book but this came to mind while watching. What if the thing that puzzles the entity is human consciousness. It can reproduce almost all life easily yet it for some reason reuses human DNA over and over and creates doublegangers that can never fully replace the people it copies. It even makes mistakes trying to replicate what makes us, us
another excellent video, Quinn really got me into science fiction, and as a scientist myself (pharmacology and embryology background), his analysis of books, especially the 'hard science fiction' ones is unparalleled.
Great video, reminded me just how lovecraftian some of the concepts are! There is a very strong cosmic horror vibe throughout the Southern Reach trilogy
I remember reading this trilogy when it came out and really, really not understanding big parts of the third book. Thanks for covering it, as frankly, even in this video I started to put together some stuff I didn't get the first time around.
I never liked science fiction until stumbling onto your channel, I’ve always been a fan of gritty stories and Star Wars/Star Trek wasn’t cutting it. Very glad I found your videos!
yk I never really enjoyed reading, but Quinn's ability to describe and talk about books is very inspiring and has made me pick up several books myself and started reading. I must say I do not regret it. Books are fun.
Just finished the series sir. Very timely and glad to hear this on a Friday morning of a long Canadian weekend. A retelling of the entire series as one book in contrast to the film which tended to stray more than a bit from the original plot is necessary IMO.
I'm so glad you made this video, I just finished the trilogy and for the life of me couldn't put what happened together, and hoped I would find a video to explain it more.
These videos, for the last 4 years, have been invaluable in my collegiate studies. Your delivery, usage of music, etc. etc. etc. helps me enter a flowstate while writing very easily, quite like History Time, Voices From the Past, and other awesome history channels. From The Old GoT stuff, through the awesome Dune videos, to the "expanded universe(s)" you've been exploring since, AWESOME WORK!
Excellent video!! Should be included with the trilogy I feel! That encounter Control had with Whitby in the storage room attic, is one of the creepiest, in this marvellous trilogy full of bizarre and beautiful things!
I absolutely loved Color out of Space! Folks have their opinions about Nicholas Cage, but it was easily one of my favorite Cosmic Horror movies, up there with Carpenter's The Thing.
First off let me just say that's a great video Quinn, a great breakdown of a very complex series. Secondly, in addition to being a Sci Fi fan, I'm a diehard weeb, and I can't help but draw parallels to the body horror stories of Junji Ito and the Machiavellinism of Gendo Ikari from Neon Genesis Evangelion. The Ito body horror, from stories such as Uzamaki/Spirals to the short stories involving giant seemingly humanoid feel sea dwelling giants should be obvious. The feeling of the transformations in the Southern Reach series feels very similar to Ito's works. The plot lines of Central seemingly working with the SS&B remind of the way Gendo interacted with Nerve and Selee in Evangelion, with both sides using the other and thinking they were the ones really in control. The way Control was used and manipulated by his mother feel similar to the way Gendo used Shinji in Eva as well, but it's not directly comparable (get in the damned Area X, Control!). I think the author drew from many sources of inspiration, and in all honesty I hope most of the mysteries are never explained. They make for such interesting comparisons and conversations that giving a hard answer to them seems to do them a disservice. Way too many stories these days try to explain things that should be left mysterious (midichlorians, anyone?). Mystery and the unknown should be a part of every good creepy story because our imaginations do so much better of a job scaring us than any author ever could.
I very highly recommend XX by Rian Hughes. This novel had one of the most unique and terrifying concepts of aliens/ and alien invasion that I’ve ever heard of. If you’re a fan of the more cerebral horror and ideas of sci-fi, there are few books that offer them in a more intricate and intriguing fashion.
Vandermeer has said that the "words" came to him in a dream...another example of Dream solutions like The Periodic Table, the Sewing machine, The theory of relativity and the model of the atom. Interesting! Examples of reality being a simulation perhaps?
That long shot on the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy really makes me want you to make videos on it. It’s so funny but they’re is so much horror in so many of banal jokes.
It looks like the movie changed quite a bit about the story, because the take away I remember having after watching it was that Area X was just reality itself being twisted by the meteorite the same way light would be by a prism. That why creatures just merged in new and horrible ways, why time was unstable, etc etc. The whole story was about a "reality prism" that twisted reality itself, but once you get close too it, very close to it, you would just look normal, but inverted. There wasn't any sentience at work here, even at the end, the double under the lighthouse was just a reflection. The light house itself, and its lens was another clue to what was going on. Light changed after passing trough a lens, the same way reality changed when passing trough the meteor.
I love this book series so much! I have never been so invested in a book than I am with this trilogy. Annihilation was my favorite until I read Acceptance. Acceptance completes the time line of things but still leaves so much open for ambiguity. Something I still think about is Lowry’s phone. Did Area X change it too? That was always a mystery to me because it has largely been accepted that Area X changes things if a biological nature, creatures with DNA. But his phone was definitely changed because it followed Control and Gloria around. What did Area X do to it and why an inanimate object?
Bro you can’t do this to me I’m only about 100 pages into Area X now I gotta finish it before I can watch. Thanks so much for the time and effort you put in to this channel. I’ve learned more about sci-fi here and have gotten great book recommendations keep it up man thank you
VanderMeer is a masterful writer: He's the holy trifecta of 1) gorgeous prose, 2) fantastic characters, and 3) thoughtful exploration of big, crazy ideas. I'm reading Dark Forest and really missing the first two points of the trifecta.
@@D2ezbmu Almost 40% of the way in and really hoping I'm passed the... Misguided attempt at characters. Supposedly it redeems itself, but Idk. Ye Wenjie was a good character, hard to say why the quality dropped.
Listening to this, I was struck by a sudden thought. We like to think of ourselves, and frequently describe ourselves as. the 'Masters of the Earth' or 'Rulers of the Earth' when in fact we are nothing of the sort. Admittedly, we are adept at manipulating our local habitat to suit our needs, wants and whims at the time (think of the acres of farmland, the vast swathes of fertile earth overlain by sheets of concrete and tarmac). We are also responsible for altering our world in unexpected and unintentional ways ( setting aside global warming and climate change, the dams we build that trigger earthquakes, or the removal of vegetation on mountain slopes that lead to landslides that strip fertile soil from the lower slopes, which would have been safe had we not interfered with the ground higher up). All this gives us a smug sense of superiority... until we're confronted with the reality of things. Because the truth is that, for all our vaunted intelligence and sophisticated civilisations, we are, in fact, far from being Masters of our world. Whilst we try not to acknowledge, or even recognise, it, we get sharp reminders with each tornado that touches down, each volcano that explodes, and even every prolonged rainfall that causes our local river to overflow its banks. Natural disasters don't even need to be violent to do this... they just need to be big enough to overwhelm us, and our world is very good at doing this. This, I think, is why cosmic horror is so effective. It pokes and prods at the tiny core inside us that we all ignore, and pretend doesn't exist, that core that understands the truth of our existence. And perhaps that is to the good, because, without those little reminders, we'd lose sight of reality and set ourseles up for a major fall!
But we are in fact the masters, when we choose to be. Amsterdam doesn't flood, Amsterdam cannot flood, because we have mastered the science of meteorology and those master designed Amsterdam to be able to withstand storms more powerful than the planet earth can create. When we choose to we absolutely dominate nature, but we have to want to. WE are the cosmic horror compared to nature, we exist and leave nature alone until she bothers us, then we overpower her with ease and bend the world to our will. WE BUILT TORNADO ALLEY, tornado alley didn't exist until we said "We are going to put thousands of miles of flat farmland here." And as a response nature tries to push us out with her puny tornadoes and it does nothing, the largest tornado ever was that really bad one in 2013, I think it was over a mile across, THATS NOTHING COMPARED TO OUR CITIES! That's like me poking you with a thumbtack thinking it will kill you. Nature is defenseless against the might of humanity, this is our world, and if we wanted it the stars would be ours as well.
I put the first book down, but your perspective encouraged me to pick it back up! I have been in a military scifi rut and wanted to get back into more of the golden age and this reminds me of that era. Thanks
Another amazing video Quinn! Obviously there are some parallels between the mimic bear from the film and the moaning creature in the book, but do you think the bear was intended to be some variation of the moaning creature or something new entirely? And does the thought of a hyper intelligent apex predator that can mimic human cries for help terrify you as much as it does me?
Bruv, in case I don’t get a chance to later I just wanted to honestly thank you. The things you’ve read and talk about got me to take a gander myself and I’m absolutely enjoying the ride I’m taking. Thanks bruv…thank you truly…
Minor correction: The Forgotten Shore is actually on the Gulf Coast, not the Pacific Coast!
More long-form videos like this please ❤
you should fix your video instead of allowing the error to persist
@@jjno easier said than done.
@Frank F Kling sooooooooooooooo depresed
Easy mistake, there is a lost coast in Northern California but it's just not the one in the book. I lived there for 4 years
An underrated book in this same genre is Blood Music by Greg Bear, published in 1985. It's about a geneticist who modifies human blood cells to be able to learn, leading to super-intelligent clusters of cells that escape and transform the entire landscape, including all of humanity. It's an incomprehensibly alien intelligence that comes from our own cells instead of outer space. Fantastic book.
Totally agree!
Thank you for the reccomendation.
That'll be my first Greg Bear book, sounds fascinating
So it’s like the nano machine apocalypse of grey goo but…red goo?
Khorne approves maybe…
Oooh ill give that a read. Thanks!
I loved this series and it’s one of cinema’s great tragedies that the movie didn’t make enough money to get the trilogy made. Very underrated. Thank for covering it! 👍
I enjoyed the film adaptation a great deal. That musical mirror dance off was a great adaptation of the otherness of the crawler.
One of the women should have been a man imo. Casts are always better when they’re diverse. Tom Cruise, Jake gyllenhal, Ed Norton. Anyone but Chris Pratt imo lol. I know those actors are expensive, but just offer a few points. Would have helped the box office a great deal imo.
@@SmartWentCrazy. Its never good when its done for the sake of itself. I love diverse casts dont get me wrong but diversity for the sake of diversity is just shoehorn-ish
Shall we start a petition? I am sure 100,000-1,000,000 sigs would be enough? There are so many easy places to farm sigs from to make this pop to some new or experimental producer? Just...mayve
@@SmartWentCrazy. No, not only were they all women in the book, but it was a conscious, explained decision. Each expedition was an experiment to see how Area X responded to different variables. The previous expedition, which the main character's husband was a part of, was all men, this one was all women.
Gotta say, this has always been a very comfortable channel for me. I love Science Fiction and Quinn has impeccable taste. I've literally stopped videos halfway through so I could go and read the books lol.
I hope Quinn continues to grow, and find wonderful Science Fiction for us to read.
His voice is relaxing. Great channel as long as he is not ranting too much about comments.
seconded. i'm not sure if this is an especially new channel or one that's just been under the radar for a while but as someone who doesn't have a lot of time to read, being able to get interesting thematic summaries from this channel has been a blessing
I hope Quinn continues to grow and transform the UA-cam landscape
@@aproudresidentofinnsmouth9105 Old channel, it used to be called "ideas of ice and fire". It's old.
Same.
The Southern Reach trilogy was one of the most invested I've been in books in years. I just devoured them. I felt a little empty for a few weeks after I finished them, because I didn't want to leave the world it built yet. It was just the perfect amount of mystery.
I tell people the books are essentially about boundary disollution writ large. Boundaries between beings, their environment, even between concepts and percepts. It's like an archetypical psychedelic trip: Beautiful, horrifying, fascinating, and profoundly mysterious and alien, all at once.
Spot on! 👍
Is it anything like the movie? The movie was almost really good, but they made it about a broken couple and used the anomaly to "reset" their marriage and... it was dumb for that.. lol
I just wanted a sci fi story that's sci fi. I don't mind love sub-stories on the side to contribute to exposition, but that was the "thing" about the movie and just ruined the whole experience for me...
@@nanomachines2985 the film was less of an adaption and more of a completely different re-imagining. i get your interpretation of the plot and while i dont agree with it i understand the disappointment. the novels are basically entirely different. you could read 10 pages of the first book and realize that these are completely separate works. i do like the movie but the trilogy is on a different level.
This trilogy and one book by Stephen King are the only books to captivate me and leave me feeling empty for weeks, just rethinking everything, trying to see if I missed something. 11/22/63 is the King book btw.
I really like this setting when put up against a lot of Lovecraft stuff. I know Lovecraft's cosmic horrors are "supposed" to be indifferent to us and the horror is "supposed" to come from understanding our smallness and insignificance in the bigger picture, but the bigger picture nevertheless feels inherently hostile and mean. Here, there is still the feeling of horror and insignificance, but there is also adaptation on our part, to some degree. Coming into contact with it changes us, but does not necessarily destroy (all) of us.
Kind of reminds me of the All Tomorrows setting, where cosmic horrors conquer and rule over humanity in a horrorshow of torture and genetic mutilation for forty million years, but something of our distant descendants still remains and manages to make a good future for themselves way way way down the line, even if it's an alien future to what we imagine now.
You have such good taste in books. Your videos got me to read Remembrance of Earth's Past. Thanks for making all these videos.
Same here. He reinvigorated my love for sci-fi
Heck, Quinn single-handedly got me back to a reading addiction simply cuz I wanted to watch his three body videos. Now I can’t stop.
Me too!!
@@Notremah isn’t it awesome? Especially during our timeline of smartphones, audiobooks, and constant content. Escape into a book and reading feels amazing.
Same with me!
The moaning creature is a fascinating one, because area x seems to have externalised the bizarre multilayered things done to the psychologist's mind by Lowry. The idea that it regularly sheds its face and skin as a result of its own identity crisis is just horrific.
Thank you for this. Have read so many accounts that seem to have lost this, though it seemed rather explicit to me.
These types of things, however, seem to be the fun of delving into this fanbase & I frequently lay on the other side, having glossed over details that seem like they should have been obvious to me once/only once another has pointed them out.
Fwiw, also Whitby outside of Southern Reach was not a clone. He got Saul'd by the flower fasho, which sucks because he did deserve a break after having to kill his double (which disappeared like normal humans are not otherwise shown to do).
@@garfieldandfriends453 That series is a work of art. Reading between the lines is arguably the point of it, because looking directly at the thing at the core of the story is impossible given its nature. Fantastic stuff.
This just unlocked an understanding for me.
A one hour video on my day off? Let's gooooo!🎉🎉🎉
I once knew a Yurthurtlerturtleburgler Nerdpertcurt, any relation? Happy Offday and a very merry Unbirthday to you!
Better late than never. Your voice belongs in all sci Fi audiobooks
That's wild
What an absolute legend 🫡
Oooh an hour long video. What a treat. Quinn’s long-form videos are always outstanding.
Life is short, too short to read every interesting book, but just long enough to watch synopsis videos like this. Please keep this up.
Zoomers, why are they like this
@@hammbannana1038 cry harder
@@hammbannana1038 cry harder
@@hammbannana1038 I'm no zoomer but I know knowledge is power and I've seen how pathetic the people without it are. You would would do well to listen more than speak seeing as your words are worth less than wind.
Honestly, it’s really amazing that we live in a time where we can consume so much content (I know that can be bad, too depending on the content). Also, if you do ever have time, PLEASE read the books. The writing style alone is definitely worth your time :)
I read the series after your first video on the topic. It was not the most satisfying in terms of conclusions but I loved the writing style and world building. Glad you revisited the series!
It's not concluded yet. Absolution is on the way.
As apocalypses go, Area is pretty gentle. For all its horrors it is beautiful. It unmakes everything it touches and reforms it into something new and beautiful and terrible. It does so with no frame of human reference and no goal we can understand. I think I wouldn't mind that kind of catharsis
Not sure if it had such intent, but this was a beautifully melancholic comment
@@Niconsernetta7321-uf2ltnothing ever dies in area X, I think I’d like to see what it makes out of my old existence
@@kingBing101 There's nothing to say "you" would be able to know of "your" new or continued existence though.
@@charlesboudreau5350 true but I’d like to think it does
@PATCHES# that's the point of it, there is no intent other than to change
I have to let you know of my gratitude for having your channel. For once,as an old 68 year old Science Fiction ,geek, I guess..I have a place to go to beat my ideas of books against your descriptions and explanations. My first books were from Edgar Rice Burroughs ,Roger Zelazny ,Phillip Jose Farmer, HG Wells, The Great HP LoveCraft, H Rider Haggard, August Derleth. Etc. If you want to go back in time, read 9 Princes in Amber..again thank you for your channel.
I'm gonna avoid watching this whole thing bc spoilers, but I just started Borne by Vandermeer and I'm really enjoying it. I have a coworker who absolutely adores the Southern Reach trilogy, having gone so far as to get a tattoo from it, and I'm considering getting either this or the Three Body Problem next, thanks in no small part to the passion of people like you and her
Ooooooh Borne is such a unique book! I don't understand the ending but I greatly enjoyed the ride. I think you may experience writing-style-whiplash if you go from VanderMeer to Liu, but wishing you a great reading journey nonetheless!
Both are great tbh idk which series I prefer
If you like borne get the southern reach. I started with the latter, loved it so much I had to read more from the author and ended up loving borne too, both the book and the little guy.
Also if you finish borne and wanna know more about that universe read The strange bird and Dead astronauts, in that order, as dead astronauts is a narrated puzzle and you need all the pieces you can get beforehand.
Right now I'm reading Perdido street station, which also gets a recommendation sharing the genre and more or less writing style.
The three body problem on the other hand while it poses interesting questions and it gets a little intriguing I just couldn't finish, the chinese to english translation makes it read like a shitty anime and I just can't get invested.
southern reach is mystery, sci-fi, and horror in their most perfect forms
So pleased to see Quinn cover this excellent series. I know a bunch of people (Indeed, I’m one of them) that read new sci-if because of Quinn’s videos, so him giving it more attention is great.
I'm so glad you're covering the annihilation series, I already binged most of your other videos but I LOVE Jeff Vandermeer's writing and the universe that he built in this trilogy, I absolutely love it:)
I should reread them in the correct order tbh. I always read trilogies out of order, it's a disgusting habit 💀😂
35:55
The thought of Area X being a way for communicating really captivated me. I never even considered the possibility.
I love it when I read through these books and stories and come back to watch the videos months down the line just to be drawn back in.
Thank you so much for making such amazing content. It truly opens my world up and I LOVE IT!!!
Awesome explanation, Quinn. Went into this expecting to watch it over four days in 15 minute chunks, ended up going through the whole thing in one sitting. You sure know how to tell a story!
I've read this trilogy 3 times already. I just love it and I wanted to make sure I didn't miss anything that might have been lost on me the first time. I'm really happy you chose to talk about Vandermeer's books. I consider him one of the best science fiction authors of the 21st century.
Yes more Annihilation videos…been waiting a long time for Quinn to review the trilogy!
This is what the internet was meant for; sharing reading suggestions.
I loved that series. There were times that it made my brain feel like I was on hallucinogens. Never felt anything like it from any other novel.
Spot-on! 👍
Incredible video. More entertaining than anything I could possibly watch on cable television. Thanks Quinns Ideas team!
Hell yeah knew I had to finish the series after your first video! Fun fact VanderMeer is local to the Tallahassee area and there is a wildlife park nearby that matches pretty nicely to what Area X is described as. There is even a walking trail recommended by him if you look up St. Marks Area X
Wait really? I go to FSU, where at is Area X. That’d be so sick to visit
@Brody Miller I can't add links to this but if you Google St. Marks Area X there is an article where they interview the author and he recommends the 12-mile Deep Creek trail in the Wildlige Refuge. There is a lighthouse at St Marks as well but he mentioned he reimagined it at the end of that trail.
I had to dig a bit for it, but you can find a map of that specific trail under the primitive trails in the Offroad Trails > Primitive trails section of that same website
Séance & Science is the RPG title I've been waiting for
It's important to remember that the 11th's Psychologist was Lawrey's weapon with stings coiled up in his brain...the "stings" may have caused the misadaptation.
I have come to deeply appreciate your dedication.
It's not just concept that you present, but the thought of ramifications and potential for change that could yet be.
Please continue to do what you do.
The world sorely needs more who think like you do.
Ah I've been waiting for you to finish the southern reach series so you can make a proper video about it. When I finished the book I desperately wanted to hear a proper analysis of them but could find nothing, so I'm very glad you made this.
Great work as always Quinn! I would suggest you to give the Borne/Strange Bird/Dead Astronauts trilogy a shot too when you make the time... I found the last book particularly touching in its imagery and concepts, truly one of VanderMeer's best :)
To be honest the last one is not for everyone but I loved it too
I finally caught up on the whole series, after initially getting bogged down on the second one Authority, and it's a slow burn, but really satisfying in the end. I am looking forward to a re-read with the entire shape of the plot fresh in my mind.
My favorite part of that book was the cell phone that Control brought home. That and his encounter with Whitby in the hidden room
And that terrible evacuation and drive from Florida, Control knowing Area X had burst the Border and was beginning its consumption of the Earth behind him, franticly checking the radio to see if there was any emergency broadcast or alert yet. Chills!!!
@@Mercer2003 Yep. Whitby stroking his hair?
I really struggled with the second book
Thank you!!! I'm so happy to see a longer video. I've been missing your videos this last month. I really enjoy listening to them at work
I have seen the movie and loved it. It is indeed a great example of impersonal cosmic horror. I was already considering reading the books after seeing the film. Now that I have seen this, I have put it back on my bucket list. The themes of the story are amazingly mindbending.
Your one of my all time favorite people on UA-cam. I love your style of videos. I love the topic you discuss. Thank You for your hard work, i appreciate it, we all appreciate it.
So glad this series is getting some love...The movie actually killed some of it because it is so different from the tone of the books. Authority is so awesome in the way it world builds and creates the Ghostbird character and Control. Acceptance brings it all together with the POV of the Director/Psychologist and the Lighthouse Keeper.
What is Area X and the Crawler? Something beyond biology and mechanics created by a race so advanced that they had defeated all barriers of dimensional travel. They had created a creature that could completely mimic and create a new environment out of the building blocks of another world. It was designed to make that world perfect so it absorbed and eradicated any pollution. It seemed to consider Humans pollution and changed them on a genetic level. It sent probes out into the world beyond the "border" and colonized The Southern Reach using it as an incubator. The Crawler utilized the Lighthouse keeper as a connection, both to the Earth and to open the connections to vast other worlds and dimensions thru the words and the creatures the words are made up of.
The Novel's language is so poetic and encompassing it is a joy to read or hear. I have the full Area X audiobook and have my device play it as bedtime stories and have been doing this for 3 years now.
I'm sure I'm leaving some stuff out, but there is sooooo much in these books that is said and unsaid...as Chaney says at one point..."you need to hear what we have to say, and how we say it"...that is a key statement in this book. How is it said?
Thanks for you complete coverage, was waiting for this! Also will you finish the 'Three Body' review of the Chinese TV program? I finished watching that and was blown away by how good it is. I think the Netflix version has a real challenge on its' hands to meet it!
I ended up seeing the movie first and loved it. But now after reading the books I see how I would have been dissapointed by how much was changed. Now I just treat the movie as a coincidentally similar story that is awesome in its own right, but has very different underlying vibes compared to the books. Strangely enough for me the movie took a more fatalistic angle, whereas the books I kinda felt uplifted by the change that area x ultimately spread
I actually enjoyed the adaptation the movie had. It was a whole different thing to the book honestly.
I'm interested in your interpretation of the area x catalyst being created by an advanced race. I just assumed it was nature itself, like a space spore that carried genes from whatever planet it evolved on. I'm also not a super close reader though, might have missed something
I've read the series more than once and am still listening to your recap. You're the man.
I'm glad to see you covering VanderMeer Quinn! I've been hoping that someone would make some deep dive Area X content, because the world is so enthralling but there are so many mysteries. I'm grateful to have some deep-dive content, because it's not easy to unravel all of the riddles in the series. The broad strokes of the plot are plain enough, but a lot of the details are not easy to piece together. Similar to Gene Wolfe in that way. But while there is a ton of great Wolfe content, I've been unable to find much on VanderMeer.
Dude, the music theme you have in this video is awesome and eerie. Great video.
I enjoyed this trilogy a great bit. Almost all my audiobook choices this past year have come recommended by this channel. The only series I'm not sure of yet is Safehold, I was drawn in by the Gababa , but I'm staying for ship logistics. At least I've stayed for two books of ship building logistics.
I am so excited that Quinn has done this trilogy!! I think this is the most thought-provoking and satisfying series I've read in my 40 years of loving sci-fi stories and novels.
I think one of the keys to understanding Southern Reach & Central comes from a line in the movie (I can’t remember if it was also in the novels) where a character cynically observes “Half the people here sleep curled up in the fetal position.”
The researchers at Southern Reach are scared. They’ve been trying for years to figure out what’s happening in Area X and they STILL don’t have a clue and it’s making them desperate.
Take the 12th expedition: they make it an all-female expedition because-up until now-all the previous expeditions were male or mixed-gender. That’s not a plan! That’s randomly throwing stuff against a wall to see what sticks. And even as they get more and more desperate to learn something-anything- about Area X, they still send their people in with hypnotic kill-words programmed into their brains so that their handlers can make them end themselves...
No wonder they find evidence that two of the previous expeditions (apparently) fought a pitched gun battle with each other at the lighthouse! Southern Reach is a toxic agency of control that is flailing around madly as it realizes control is impossible.
There’s one scene in ‘Authority’ when (I think) the director discovers that one of the SR’s scientists is hiding in a crawl space every night instead of going back to his room. On the walls of that space, the scientist has painted a deranged mural featuring all the other scientists of Southern Reach. As horrified as the director is by the discovery, the scientist himself is almost catatonic at being discovered.
The Southern Reach are scientists in the hands of authoritarian government that has reached the edge of what they can control, and are screaming into the void beyond.
An HOUR long Quinn video? Yes please, and thank you!
Your channel is amazing and reminds me of what UA-cam is supposed to be.
Sharing the things you love IS sharing Yourself.
Thank you for sharing Quinn, hope you continue for many years to come.
I’ve only read the first one so far but I really loved it. I need to grab the other two soon.
Brah, everytime you post a video i think to myself that this one couldn't surpass the previous ones. And everytime you prove me wrong. Keep up.
Havent read the book but this came to mind while watching. What if the thing that puzzles the entity is human consciousness. It can reproduce almost all life easily yet it for some reason reuses human DNA over and over and creates doublegangers that can never fully replace the people it copies. It even makes mistakes trying to replicate what makes us, us
another excellent video, Quinn really got me into science fiction, and as a scientist myself (pharmacology and embryology background), his analysis of books, especially the 'hard science fiction' ones is unparalleled.
Great video, reminded me just how lovecraftian some of the concepts are! There is a very strong cosmic horror vibe throughout the Southern Reach trilogy
dude thanks for doing this vid ! some of the greatest lore dumps and data downloads on the internet over here . keep up the good work
I remember reading this trilogy when it came out and really, really not understanding big parts of the third book. Thanks for covering it, as frankly, even in this video I started to put together some stuff I didn't get the first time around.
Outstanding Storytelling ..Ground breaking at a time I thought the art and field was dead
Another moving and thought-provoking video. I absolutely love your work. Although, you've made my reading list into quite the mountain, ha! Thank you!
Really like these hour long episodes. It usually takes me exactly an hour to drive to work so it’s perfect 👍
pff this is as exciting as a movie for me QQ thank you quin
I never liked science fiction until stumbling onto your channel, I’ve always been a fan of gritty stories and Star Wars/Star Trek wasn’t cutting it. Very glad I found your videos!
yk I never really enjoyed reading, but Quinn's ability to describe and talk about books is very inspiring and has made me pick up several books myself and started reading. I must say I do not regret it. Books are fun.
Get into some HP Lovecraft, if you like the books Quinn recommends there's a few books from Lovecraft you'll absolutely love
Oh boy!!! An hour long video! Can't wait to watch!
Just finished the series sir. Very timely and glad to hear this on a Friday morning of a long Canadian weekend. A retelling of the entire series as one book in contrast to the film which tended to stray more than a bit from the original plot is necessary IMO.
I'm so glad you made this video, I just finished the trilogy and for the life of me couldn't put what happened together, and hoped I would find a video to explain it more.
Love these stories that touch on real post-humanism. Writers seems to have a hard time not seeing humans as the apex of all reality.
Because we ARE the apex of reality.
So glad you covered these, reading them in 2019 changed my perception of sci-fi greatly!
These videos, for the last 4 years, have been invaluable in my collegiate studies. Your delivery, usage of music, etc. etc. etc. helps me enter a flowstate while writing very easily, quite like History Time, Voices From the Past, and other awesome history channels. From The Old GoT stuff, through the awesome Dune videos, to the "expanded universe(s)" you've been exploring since, AWESOME WORK!
Excellent video!! Should be included with the trilogy I feel!
That encounter Control had with Whitby in the storage room attic, is one of the creepiest, in this marvellous trilogy full of bizarre and beautiful things!
Literally bought the trilogy because of you, Quinn! Keep up the good work!
I absolutely loved Color out of Space! Folks have their opinions about Nicholas Cage, but it was easily one of my favorite Cosmic Horror movies, up there with Carpenter's The Thing.
I'm really glad you're diving into the Southern Reach books.
You definitely have a great second career as an audiobook narrator - excellent!
Yessss! so glad you're covering the Southern Reach series!
First off let me just say that's a great video Quinn, a great breakdown of a very complex series. Secondly, in addition to being a Sci Fi fan, I'm a diehard weeb, and I can't help but draw parallels to the body horror stories of Junji Ito and the Machiavellinism of Gendo Ikari from Neon Genesis Evangelion. The Ito body horror, from stories such as Uzamaki/Spirals to the short stories involving giant seemingly humanoid feel sea dwelling giants should be obvious. The feeling of the transformations in the Southern Reach series feels very similar to Ito's works. The plot lines of Central seemingly working with the SS&B remind of the way Gendo interacted with Nerve and Selee in Evangelion, with both sides using the other and thinking they were the ones really in control. The way Control was used and manipulated by his mother feel similar to the way Gendo used Shinji in Eva as well, but it's not directly comparable (get in the damned Area X, Control!). I think the author drew from many sources of inspiration, and in all honesty I hope most of the mysteries are never explained. They make for such interesting comparisons and conversations that giving a hard answer to them seems to do them a disservice. Way too many stories these days try to explain things that should be left mysterious (midichlorians, anyone?). Mystery and the unknown should be a part of every good creepy story because our imaginations do so much better of a job scaring us than any author ever could.
It’s so refreshing to see someone enjoy this as much as I did.
I imagine the biologists form is basically like the elden beast. Also, love the long form content deep dive.
Thank you for helping cope with a subway ride to the train station and the train ride home , mostly and another 'ask' for Father's day , thank you.
who’s here for a recap before reading absolution? 😊
it has been awhile since I read this, so this was a good reminder. I think you did a fine job.
I very highly recommend XX by Rian Hughes. This novel had one of the most unique and terrifying concepts of aliens/ and alien invasion that I’ve ever heard of. If you’re a fan of the more cerebral horror and ideas of sci-fi, there are few books that offer them in a more intricate and intriguing fashion.
I never really engaged or used YT until I found Quinn's Ideas. Thank you for sharing your taste and talents!
Vandermeer has said that the "words" came to him in a dream...another example of Dream solutions like The Periodic Table, the Sewing machine, The theory of relativity and the model of the atom. Interesting! Examples of reality being a simulation perhaps?
That long shot on the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy really makes me want you to make videos on it. It’s so funny but they’re is so much horror in so many of banal jokes.
It looks like the movie changed quite a bit about the story, because the take away I remember having after watching it was that Area X was just reality itself being twisted by the meteorite the same way light would be by a prism.
That why creatures just merged in new and horrible ways, why time was unstable, etc etc.
The whole story was about a "reality prism" that twisted reality itself, but once you get close too it, very close to it, you would just look normal, but inverted.
There wasn't any sentience at work here, even at the end, the double under the lighthouse was just a reflection.
The light house itself, and its lens was another clue to what was going on. Light changed after passing trough a lens, the same way reality changed when passing trough the meteor.
Yes! I completely agree that this series is exploring similar concepts as the color out of space!
I love this book series so much! I have never been so invested in a book than I am with this trilogy. Annihilation was my favorite until I read Acceptance. Acceptance completes the time line of things but still leaves so much open for ambiguity. Something I still think about is Lowry’s phone. Did Area X change it too? That was always a mystery to me because it has largely been accepted that Area X changes things if a biological nature, creatures with DNA. But his phone was definitely changed because it followed Control and Gloria around. What did Area X do to it and why an inanimate object?
Thank you for existing.
Man, cant wait til "The Book if the New Sun" gets crazy videos like this. The /r/GeneWolfe subreddit would eat up some quality videos on that series.
Bro you can’t do this to me I’m only about 100 pages into Area X now I gotta finish it before I can watch. Thanks so much for the time and effort you put in to this channel. I’ve learned more about sci-fi here and have gotten great book recommendations keep it up man thank you
VanderMeer is a masterful writer: He's the holy trifecta of 1) gorgeous prose, 2) fantastic characters, and 3) thoughtful exploration of big, crazy ideas.
I'm reading Dark Forest and really missing the first two points of the trifecta.
I actually stopped in the first 3rd of Dark Forest. The first book was pretty good overall…. But that first part of Book 2 is really… not great
@@D2ezbmu Almost 40% of the way in and really hoping I'm passed the... Misguided attempt at characters. Supposedly it redeems itself, but Idk. Ye Wenjie was a good character, hard to say why the quality dropped.
The Southern Reach trilogy is just what Colour Out of Space woulda been if HP Lovecraft had done magic mushrooms.
Change my mind.
And if Lovecraft took a minute to actually try and understand the science he was writing about, maybe
My favourite cosmic horror series, so excited to hear your take on it!!
It sounds like a contingency device used in a war to recreate life from a dead or dying ecosystem, like a backup save or reset button for a world.
Ik u probably hear it alot from fans but ur content really is one of the few that are capable of holding my attention on something interesting!
Listening to this, I was struck by a sudden thought. We like to think of ourselves, and frequently describe ourselves as. the 'Masters of the Earth' or 'Rulers of the Earth' when in fact we are nothing of the sort. Admittedly, we are adept at manipulating our local habitat to suit our needs, wants and whims at the time (think of the acres of farmland, the vast swathes of fertile earth overlain by sheets of concrete and tarmac). We are also responsible for altering our world in unexpected and unintentional ways ( setting aside global warming and climate change, the dams we build that trigger earthquakes, or the removal of vegetation on mountain slopes that lead to landslides that strip fertile soil from the lower slopes, which would have been safe had we not interfered with the ground higher up). All this gives us a smug sense of superiority... until we're confronted with the reality of things.
Because the truth is that, for all our vaunted intelligence and sophisticated civilisations, we are, in fact, far from being Masters of our world. Whilst we try not to acknowledge, or even recognise, it, we get sharp reminders with each tornado that touches down, each volcano that explodes, and even every prolonged rainfall that causes our local river to overflow its banks. Natural disasters don't even need to be violent to do this... they just need to be big enough to overwhelm us, and our world is very good at doing this.
This, I think, is why cosmic horror is so effective. It pokes and prods at the tiny core inside us that we all ignore, and pretend doesn't exist, that core that understands the truth of our existence. And perhaps that is to the good, because, without those little reminders, we'd lose sight of reality and set ourseles up for a major fall!
But we are in fact the masters, when we choose to be. Amsterdam doesn't flood, Amsterdam cannot flood, because we have mastered the science of meteorology and those master designed Amsterdam to be able to withstand storms more powerful than the planet earth can create. When we choose to we absolutely dominate nature, but we have to want to.
WE are the cosmic horror compared to nature, we exist and leave nature alone until she bothers us, then we overpower her with ease and bend the world to our will. WE BUILT TORNADO ALLEY, tornado alley didn't exist until we said "We are going to put thousands of miles of flat farmland here." And as a response nature tries to push us out with her puny tornadoes and it does nothing, the largest tornado ever was that really bad one in 2013, I think it was over a mile across, THATS NOTHING COMPARED TO OUR CITIES! That's like me poking you with a thumbtack thinking it will kill you. Nature is defenseless against the might of humanity, this is our world, and if we wanted it the stars would be ours as well.
I put the first book down, but your perspective encouraged me to pick it back up! I have been in a military scifi rut and wanted to get back into more of the golden age and this reminds me of that era. Thanks
Any chance you can do a video on "I have no mouth, and I must scream"? One of my favorite stories.
Just great work in writing, analysis, and production. Watching this is just as entertaining as the books themselves.
Anyone here after dredge?
Just wanted to say: I love the longer format!! keep it up man :D
Another amazing video Quinn!
Obviously there are some parallels between the mimic bear from the film and the moaning creature in the book, but do you think the bear was intended to be some variation of the moaning creature or something new entirely?
And does the thought of a hyper intelligent apex predator that can mimic human cries for help terrify you as much as it does me?
It had human eyes dawg...ugh I hated that scene so much but it was a great movie.
@@maybemablemaples2144 so you believe it is meant to be a representation of the moaning creature?
Hey, I just listened to your first Annihilation video like 2 days ago. Glad you got the trilogy down!
Excellent content, but consider adding timeline chapters for videos this long so we might skip around to topics
Agreed.
Bruv, in case I don’t get a chance to later I just wanted to honestly thank you.
The things you’ve read and talk about got me to take a gander myself and I’m absolutely enjoying the ride I’m taking.
Thanks bruv…thank you truly…