Thread:Calicokat/@comment-4091815-20141029150327/@comment-25592265-20141123153734

I can definitely see that reading and I'm 50/50 on the two. I also read it that the pain began overwhelming him and Paige took it back instead. But, it's also just not being surprised if she does come back and seeing an opening for it. Like, when Derek "died," he's had so many less-emphasized brushes with death before starting at least as far back as the end of "Heart Monitor" I called at my screen "Walk it off!"

Now, if he'd really died I would've eventually felt awful. *cough*

I'm working on fleshing out what I wrote now and I feel like I should cover one or two of the lesser known books I've read in a little more detail (description, a short excerpt is looking a little long) but I'm conflicted on how much. Probably this is going to work itself out and I'll cut it down sufficiently but I wanted to know what you've got in mind here, too.

Right now the article most naturally breaks itself down into three parts: Shakespeare, books, films. I don't want people to feel like they're reading a literary essay so I'm thinking I can keep the stuff fairly brisk and hit the high points. The films are really easy to highlight the visuals and stuff from, the books are a bit trickier. The show covers Shakespeare by itself so it's really just a matter of pointing to it.

(I should probably finish reading Hamlet to figure out if there's any quotes from it in the show since they do mention it by name. It's so looong. Somehow I never read it at uni.)