See, I've always read it that her sin wasn't so much growing up as growing up in such a way that the worst characteristics of the child Susan we see in the early books were strengthened rather than controlled or outgrown. Which works for me, because I do see it as a natural outgrowth of who she was in the early books.
That's how I read it. Also, I've never felt her fate was finalized.
I'm having this crazy good mozzarella/tomato/basil pizza from Pax Food. OMG it is so buttery good.
if I could go back in time and be in his writers group
Fat. Chance.
This is my big issue with the Inklings -- they have all the worst characteristics of their nation, class, and period. There is no alternate universe conceivable in which women are allowed to drink beer and smoke pipes with them; in such a universe, they aren't the Inklings any more.
This is my big issue with the Inklings -- they have all the worst characteristics of the English intellectual classes. There is no alternate universe conceivable in which women are allowed to drink beer and smoke pipes with them; in such a universe, they aren't the Inklings any more.
So basically, your biggest issue is the times and circumstances of the culture into which they were born?
So basically, your biggest issue is the times and circumstances of the culture into which they were born?
The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe was published in 1950. It's not like it's from 1850.
I got a note from Jeff Mejia's sister Jodi. He is getting some super-duper kidney treatment they hope will get his kidney to function properly. They are in wait and see mode. He doesn't have internet access, but the hospital has a mail interface where he can get messages. [link]
My mother and step-father are expected shortly so showering is the plan now.
The Inklings, and their co-horts, were the last vestiges of Victorian/Edwardian writers. They reveled in their non-modernity and rejected the new stuff (JRRT was notorious in his dislike of television, and even though he had a car while his kids were still living at home, he got rid of it during WWII or right after, and never bought another).
Relevance?
Oh, I just mean that Betsy's beer-drinking, pipe-smoking women are around in 1950, so if the Inklings are not hanging out with female authors as peers, they're doing it on purpose.
Edit: There, see? Like Kathy said.
I don't actually have any position to take in this discussion.