You'll never look at Alice in Wonderland the same way again after reading it.
...This isn't a Santa Steps Out thing, is it?
I have the 1969 collection of Moore's Jirel stories rattling around my library somewhere - would you like to borrow it?
Oh, gosh, that's extremely generous of you. Let me see if there's anything at the library first (and actually, I should ask my brother since I may see him this weekend). But if that doesn't pan out I may have to take you up on that. Is there a particular title to look for, or are a lot of the stories scattered about in anthologies?
Actually, if we do a book exchange, I'll have to lend you Hawk the Slayer. [insert evil laughter here]
Anybody here ever read Emile Zola? I am reading a New Yorker article about his feud with Paul Cezanne, and wondering whether
Germinal
is the only exciting work of his, or whether I should go back and try others.
(
Germinal
is pretty exciting. It is basically a giant muckraking journalism novel about a miners' strike, except that, because it is not in the New World, there is not a single shred of optimism to be found. However, there are explosions.)
Yes, Nutty. We read, um, Nana, I think. The one about the prostitute. It was very much in the naturalism school. Pretty grim in many ways, although I don't actually recall how it ended.
Cinnamon toast:
And there weren't any explosions.
Is there a particular title to look for, or are a lot of the stories scattered about in anthologies?
The stories were collected into Jirel of Joiry back in 1969 (reprinted by Ace in 1977), but originally they're spread across numerous issues of Weird Tales from the 1930s. I've seen the first one, "Black God's Kiss" reprinted in several anthologies, but the others are pretty obscure.
Pretty grim in many ways, although I don't actually recall how it ended.
Nana
is the only Emil Zola I've read as well. It ends fairly grimly, too, with Nana dying of smallpox that completely disfigures her, all traces of her beauty destroyed. There is a plot summary of the book here--that's a nice little site btw, with loads of little essays on the portrayal of medicine in literature and visual arts.
Just finished
Banewreaker
by Jacqueline Carey. Here's the review I wrote for Amazon:
It's an interesting conceit to re-tell The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion from a point of view that's sympathetic to Sauron/Morgoth. And it's more philosophically interesting yet to map that sympathetic evil god to Lucifer, suffering because he gave the gift of sex to humans, but still the only god who will answer a human's prayers.
Interesting conceits do not a novel make, however. Carey seems to having taken a lesson from Robert Jordan, and written 500 pages wherein Nothing Happens.
That may be part of her philosophical study also, mirroring the textual assertion that no matter what people do, fate is pre-ordained. I don't care; it makes for a pointless read. If she'd written this as Lit Crit of Tolkein, or as a writing exercise clearly reversing Tolkein, or as a thought piece about predeterminism, I'd forgive. But it's supposed to be a novel, which means it's supposed to have things like character development and a denouement.
I understand this book and the second, Godslayer, were supposed to be published as one. Perhaps if Carey had edited out several hundred pages of Nothing Happening they could've been, and this would have worked as a novel.
I love your snarky tone, Raq. I bounced hard off Carey's first novel, and never looked back. Nothing anyone else has said about her is sufficient to get me back into her stuff.
Hmm. I enjoyed Banewreaker. (I have not read the second one yet.) I enjoyed the worldbuilding, which I thought was fascinating in its own right. I though the characters were real. No they did not undergo a lot of transformation, but they did reveal more of themselves as time went on. Then again I like the LOTR too, and there many complaints that it had long passages with nothing much happening too. Different views...
My housemate and I are a leeetle obsessed with HBO's Rome now and both of us are bemoaning our dearth of knowledge of actual Roman history. Does anybody have any recommendations for well written non-fiction about ancient Rome?