truepenny: artist's rendering of Sidneyia inexpectans (mfu: ik-eyebrow)
Sarah/Katherine ([personal profile] truepenny) wrote2006-06-24 12:41 pm

UBC # 17: Black Powder War / UBC in progress

UBC #17
Novik, Naomi. Black Powder War. New York: Del Rey-Ballantine Books, 2006.

I've been dithering about what to say about this book for a couple of days now. Because on the one hand, I liked it; on the other hand, I thought it had more flaws than the previous two books; on the gripping hand, although I do not--quite--know [livejournal.com profile] naominovik, we have friends in common, and she may or may not be reading this blog.

(This is where the whole living genre thing gets very very weird. I'm used to talking about people who've been dead for 400 years. So, you know, if I say I think Timon of Athens kind of sucks, I don't have to worry that Shakespeare will see it. And, yes, I think it is something to be mindful of.)

So, yes, I enjoyed it, but I did think it had problems. Mostly to do with the fact, as I have said before, that travel narrative is hard.



I'm currently reading a couple of books at once. [livejournal.com profile] scott_lynch's The Lies of Locke Lamora (which is so far shiny and very clever), and Angus Fletcher's Allegory: The Theory of a Symbolic Mode. (Mr. Fletcher for the table, Mr. Lynch for the bedroom.)

I'll have a great deal to say about Allegory when I've finished it, but for now I want to offer an artifact of 1964, which is when it was published. He's talking about the use of animals in the doubled plots of allegory:
A popular novel like The Strange One runs two parallel stories at once, one telling of miscegenation between a white boy and an Indian girl, the other describing the mismating of two different species of geese.
(Fletcher 192-93)

To which I can only say, as I said in the margin, "!"

A footnote tells us that The Strange One was written by Fred Bodsworth and published in 1959. Has anyone ever heard of this book? Can anyone report back on whether it's truly as awful, muddle-headed (species and race are COMPLETELY DIFFERENT CONCEPTS, thankyouverymuch), and offensive as it sounds?

Morbid curiosity is possibly the worst kind.

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WORKS CITED
Fletcher, Angus. Allegory: The Theory of a Symbolic Mode. 1964. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1995.
kate_nepveu: sleeping cat carved in brown wood (Default)

[personal profile] kate_nepveu 2006-06-25 12:02 pm (UTC)(link)
Since the first time an author shocked me by e-mailing me after reading a review I'd written on the 'net (Mary Doria Russell, _The Sparrow_, 1997), I've been aware that *any* living author might read what I write about their books. As a result, I've tried to preserve the distinction between "this is bad" and "I didn't like this," and to keep an eye on hyperbole.

(Which is not to say I haven't ranted when I hated the living authors' books.)

Other than that, well, writing about people's books is what I do, and so I just try and do it in a way that I could look the author in the eye if I needed to.

(Hence, http://www.steelypips.org/weblog/2006/06/novik_03.php .)

[identity profile] truepenny.livejournal.com 2006-06-25 01:04 pm (UTC)(link)
That, as Jack Sparrow says, is very interesting. Since the part of the book I thought worked best was the Napoleonic stuff.

(I agree about the character introduced near the end.)
kate_nepveu: sleeping cat carved in brown wood (Default)

[personal profile] kate_nepveu 2006-06-25 06:30 pm (UTC)(link)
This would be the travel-narrative-is-hard thing? Yeah, it is, but for me at least it was movement, where the Napoleonic stuff felt like work to get through.

Is there _anyone_ who doesn't like the character introduced near the end? On general statistical principles there must be, but it's hard for me to imagine.