(A more conventional reveal post here.)
-Reread A Deadly Education and The Last Graduate and had many many deep conversations with
sprocket about how a magical school would feel/think, chronology, all the parts where Novik did or maybe did not think about where she was going in TLG when writing ADE, El as a massively unreliable narrator not just as regards her own feelings but also as regards actual canon historical events and dates and numbers thereof, etc.
-Did the deep dive into reading The Waste Land, which I'd of course read before but never taken the deep dive with. You guys, there's nothing like trying to do pastiche to make one realize that a canon author is a freaking genius. And also Eliot is a total troll, those footnotes, omg. (I am convinced he would absolutely positively put a rickroll in his poetry if he were writing today.)
I bought the edition by Helen Vendler because a) I recognized the name b) it had better footnotes (not just Eliot's) than the other paperback editions in the bookstore c) it was a very small paperback and I could carry it around with me everywhere, which I did for the last two months.
-Reread a bunch of
rheinsberg posts, especially Katte's last letter, the Puncta.
-Reread a few chapters of 1 and 2 Kings, and also this interesting article casting Ahab and Jezebel as the victims of Bad Publicity, which I am super taking with a Very Large grain of salt (now that I know to mistrust pop historical articles basically Always) but which is still fascinating to think about.
-Read the Atlas Obscura article about Cannibal Ants in a Polish Bunker (which I had actually read before but had completely forgotten I had read) which is super creepy and super fascinating and with a happy ending, except that when I was telling D about it, he was like, "wait, you mean they set the cannibal ants LOOSE ON THE WORLD??" which, uh, hadn't been my takeaway.
-Reread A Deadly Education and The Last Graduate and had many many deep conversations with
-Did the deep dive into reading The Waste Land, which I'd of course read before but never taken the deep dive with. You guys, there's nothing like trying to do pastiche to make one realize that a canon author is a freaking genius. And also Eliot is a total troll, those footnotes, omg. (I am convinced he would absolutely positively put a rickroll in his poetry if he were writing today.)
I bought the edition by Helen Vendler because a) I recognized the name b) it had better footnotes (not just Eliot's) than the other paperback editions in the bookstore c) it was a very small paperback and I could carry it around with me everywhere, which I did for the last two months.
-Reread a bunch of
-Reread a few chapters of 1 and 2 Kings, and also this interesting article casting Ahab and Jezebel as the victims of Bad Publicity, which I am super taking with a Very Large grain of salt (now that I know to mistrust pop historical articles basically Always) but which is still fascinating to think about.
-Read the Atlas Obscura article about Cannibal Ants in a Polish Bunker (which I had actually read before but had completely forgotten I had read) which is super creepy and super fascinating and with a happy ending, except that when I was telling D about it, he was like, "wait, you mean they set the cannibal ants LOOSE ON THE WORLD??" which, uh, hadn't been my takeaway.
no subject
Date: 2022-01-03 06:17 am (UTC)