She wrote a great deal for television, particularly in the eighties.
Yep, scripts for such children's television gems as 'Five Children and It', and her own writing was adapted for TV too (as was the case with 'Moondial', which was her own novel). Some really great fantasy there.
Thanks, Bev - we've got the T.H. White, so I'll give that a shot and see how it goes. I have a few of the Tennyson poems in other collections, but I think I'll get that book to add to the Camelot shelf anyway.
I am highly amused that "customers who purchased Idylls of the King also purchased Shane".
There's a biography about Hope Mirrlees coming out.
Lovely picture - you can see why Virginia Woolf described her as: “her own heroine — capricious, exacting, exquisite, very learned, and beautifully dressed.”
Thanks to you people, I bought the Girl with a Dragon Tattoo last night. I'd actually given it as a gift, but never read it myself!
Ooooh. Jesse! So enjoyable.
I'm reading
The Story of Edgar Sawtelle
now. Not very far in, but enjoyable enough. Not at the Girl with a Dragon Tattoo level.
Can I also fess up? I find the statistics about abuse at the beginning of each section totally creepy.
There's a lovely piece about Jack Vance in the NY Times magazine [link]
Thanks for the link, Ginger. I liked Vance even before the NYT called him "the anti-Paul Auster."
I haven't read the whole article; I'll be interested to see if they mention that Gary Gygax based the magic system in D&D on Vance's work.
I'll be interested to see if they mention that Gary Gygax based the magic system in D&D on Vance's work.
They do.
I discovered Vance in that magic 12-13 zone with The Dying Earth. One of the most pleasurable and decadent reading experiences you can have at that age.
Someone once asked Isaac Asimov when the Golden Age of Science Fiction was. After some thought he replied, "12".
Don't tell Readercon.
(Sorry; I've been sucked into reading the Readercon kerfluffle, and it's just amusing the crap out of me. GRE scores? Seriously?!?)