Ugh. Such smarmy BS. I mean, thanks for the offer, but I mean writing the bible as though it were a modern novel, not some hateful Christian's revenge porn.
Thanks. That would be closer, yes.
Because after I'm done with my religious fiction trilogy, I want to see if I can write it.
I mean, if Muslims can argue that no one can improve the Quran, why not have a similar writing challenge for the books of the bible?
Agreed.
To be fair, Labyrinth very much copies some of the (30's era) movie themes from TWoO.
Yeah, you're right.
Like, I wonder what Genesis would read like if using modern novel tropes instead of ancient oral ones.
This really wasn't that upsetting. We cool.
LOL, I don't like to write romance scenes. I'd have to ask my brother to cowrite those.
I like Deborah and Jael better. Action women are better than women known only for their hotness.
Yeah.
But he's such a hack.
LOL. I'm sure you'd find people who say it's still better than Twilight.
I'm looking for less "Dracula" by Bram Stoker and more "Harry Potter". In other words, the bible is only a novel if you REALLY stretch the definition of one. Stoker's Dracula is a proto-novel, where page length is achieved not through a unified story but by slapping together "letters" and "memos" and stuff. It's a good book, don't get me wrong, but it's not the style I'm looking for.
I haven't seen it or read it, but it smacks too much of Fifty Shades to me.
Two if you remember the sequel wasn't around for centuries after the first was written.
Then you have the obligatory Reboot Story with the Quran.
This would be pretty much what I'm looking for, but I think it sells the stories short to treat the bible as one unified work when it clearly isn't.
I really need to watch that. And The Life of Brian.
Middle Earth is WAY better than Narnia.