"Burning Dog" has been my favorite by far as well. It truly did a excellent job of capturing the feel of what you read about in both books. It felt true. People who dislike these last two are, well, okay. I don't even know what to say to them. Clearly, we speak a different cinematic language.
Nate and GK book are just so... so fucking sad, but, like, okay. this sounds crazy, yes, but they're both sad, uplifting, and beautiful in the way that Angel was to me. The whole, 'what matters is the struggle, the journey, the love & comeranderie, and it doesn't matter if you fail or succeed or if you can be redeemed for what you have done' thing. If everyone is broken, is anyone?
And oh, Nate. Nate, Nate, Nate. He loved them too much to kill them. Just, god. He had so many ideals and dreams, and it all melted away into 1 concrete thing. It's like he both found and lost himself in those few years in the service.
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Nate and GK book are just so... so fucking sad, but, like, okay. this sounds crazy, yes, but they're both sad, uplifting, and beautiful in the way that Angel was to me. The whole, 'what matters is the struggle, the journey, the love & comeranderie, and it doesn't matter if you fail or succeed or if you can be redeemed for what you have done' thing. If everyone is broken, is anyone?
And oh, Nate. Nate, Nate, Nate. He loved them too much to kill them. Just, god. He had so many ideals and dreams, and it all melted away into 1 concrete thing. It's like he both found and lost himself in those few years in the service.