selenak: (Default)
From: [personal profile] selenak
While a woman sleeping with a lady-in-waiting wasn't necessarily sexual in those days, the "only a man could love a woman" was more than I was expecting from Anisimov, and far more than Russian wiki has (or at least had when I checked in our last discussion).

True, and he mentions in both books Anna was supposedly in bed with Julia when the coup happened. (In one version, Elizabeth herself marched into the room and said "Time to get up, sister", but A. dismisses this as less likely than her giving the order while in the same building, but not personally marching into the room.)

I don't know if you had the same impression, but while reading Five Empresses, I had a sense of translationese that I don't usually get from translated history works. It might have been the translator intentionally staying closer to the original, since the author clearly has a distinct voice, or it might simply have been needing another pass-through or two.

Yes, I did have that impression, and I also thought the translator of the Elizabeth biography was a better stylist.

Interesting! I did notice the whiplash of "love marriage" to "oppressed slave," but this explanation hadn't occurred to me (even after recently reading an entire volume of essays on Alexei).

I mean, our author's argument for concluding Catherine saw Alexei only as an obstacles to her own son inheriting is that she and Peter hardly mention him in years of their correspondence, only two or three times, and there without any warmth, but like I said: it's one thing to conclude "I don't want Alexei to inherit the throne" - especially since chances are Czar Alexei might have done to her what Peter did to his mother, forced her to become a nun and send her to nunnery in the back of beyond Siberia - or even "better Alexei dies", and another "watching the father of my children torture his oldest son to death: fine by me". Isn't it more likely that she may have thought "if he can do that to his own son, he may be able to do it to our children as well if they defy him one day - or to me". (In a novel about Catherine by Ellen Alpsten, she has Catherine sympathetic with Alexei because she remembers him as a lonely kid, even if the adult man hates her as a part of his father, but that might be idealizing her. Still, some sympathy for a tortured person under these circumstances is entirely within the realms of possibility.)

Yes, true, but I would also point out that we have the benefit of hindsight that Fritz didn't. At the end of the day, he had something like 3,000 men left out of his whole army. Of course he freaked out, that's not enough to defend a country.

*nods* And none of his previous defeats were comparable in scale. And note that for all the "better suicide than capture" talk, he did NOT kill himself. *insert Kalckreuth snark from Kalckreuth memoirs here* Not responding emotionally after such an event would actually be way more pathological.
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
In a novel about Catherine by Ellen Alpsten

Oh, you've read this. Would you rec it? I have the sample on my Kindle, but a) I read very little fiction, b) the reviews on Amazon weren't inspiring, so I haven't actually bought it.

Lol, glancing at the Kindle page on Amazon, I see Nancy Goldstone says it's "well researched." I mean maybe, but how would you know? :P #ObligatoryGoldstoneDig (She really should have stuck to writing a novel herself.)

Not responding emotionally after such an event would actually be way more pathological.

Charles XII: Excuse me, I took Poltava in stride, just like I took everything else in stride!

Mind you, I have seen Charles pathologized, by the author of a book I read recently for German practice. He gets pathologized in that book for having a defective personality, partly on the grounds that he took things in stride, partly because he didn't have enough hobbies, but mostly because he either wasn't interested in sex (i.e. was asexual) or that he was into sex but decided not to have it.

As for Fritz, I do think his emotional state was a factor; if he didn't have clinical depression, I think maybe he had subclinical depression, and almost certainly either clinical or subclinical PTSD. I didn't use to think so, but we've gathered a lot of evidence in salon, and I've changed my mind.

But on this occasion, he didn't know those 27,000 men would report back to duty and hadn't like, deserted or been captured.

*insert Kalckreuth snark from Kalckreuth memoirs here*

That was such a great line.

For those who weren't here or could use a reminder:

The King had told Prince Heinrich repeatedly that he'd poison himself if the news arrived that the Duke of Bevern was forced to cross the Oder. (...) Returning to the camp I met Cocceji, the AD to Field Marshal Keith, my great friend. I told him the news, and added: "So, how fares Mr. Poison?" Cocceji replied, laughing: "He lost his recipe."
selenak: (Default)
From: [personal profile] selenak
Would you rec it? I have the sample on my Kindle, but a) I read very little fiction, b) the reviews on Amazon weren't inspiring, so I haven't actually bought it.

It's workman-like okay, neither bad nor really really good. I think my main problem was that it was written in first person, and it is really hard to pull off first person historical fiction without making the voice too modern. Not to say it can't be done, but this author couldn't. I never really believed Catherine as a late 17th, early 18th century woman. Otoh, I thought she did a credible job with the central relationships, i.e. Catherine/Peter/Alexander Menshikov, slashes intentional, because it was a threesome emotionally, and I do suspect only an eye on the market prevented at some point three ways sex as well. And the Alexeii stuff was incredibly gory and shocking, which, well, history. She also had Peter present Catherine with the head of her lover and making her keep it in her room as punishment, which I think is one of those "maybe? He may have or maybe not, we don't know for sure" things.

Re: Kalckreuth, "he lost his recipe" is one of those things which people are bound to believe you made up if they'd find in a story but which was actually said. BTW, since there's this passage in Henri de Catt's diary (not memoirs) about wanting to punch Kalckreuth (while de Catt is at Heinrich's camp), I choose to believe it was about a similar remark, especially given that one of the most famous passages in Catt's memoirs (and diary) is Fritz telling him he'll kill himself if captured, and that he feels himself especially trusted as the ONLY one to ever hear of such an intention. And then Fritz' brother's boyfriend shows he also knows...
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
I might fall short of calling it pathological, but Charles, you realize that's not exactly typical! At all!

I was impressed that he took so much responsibility for the defeat! Clearly he has mastered growth mindset! ;)

The Kalabalik, though... :P If I were going to call anything he did pathological, it would be that.

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