What I have been reading
Dec. 12th, 2018 03:14 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I felt inspired to start re-reading Diana Wynne Jones. She is one of my favourite authors and I feel that even her weakest books are still a good read. Despite recurring themes like; multiple universes, a protagonist with no, or weak magic really being very powerful, abusive parental figures and clever cats, she never gets boring, and the books always take unexpected and interesting twists.
I actually started a chronological re-read a couple of years ago and read Wilkin’s Toot and The Ogre Downstairs (I jumped Changeover which I have never been able to get into.) But then I came to Dogsbody and the re-read halted. It’s not that it isn't a good book, but the abuse Kathleen suffers paired with cruelty to animals paired with the death of a beloved pet makes it a too tough read for me. I know Sirius doesn’t really die, but he does for Kathleen, and the book ends with them separated.
So I decided to re-read the Wynne Jones-books I only felt like I wanted to read. I started with Charmed Life which was the first Chrestomanci-novel written, even if it’s the third one in the series internal chronology. It’s also one of her books I have re-read the least. It’s definitely not one of her best. I like Cat, and I find his passivity and distrust believable as he has been used and influenced by his older sister his whole life. But I really dislike the way Janet gets to decide that she and all her counterpart are better off in the new worlds they have been forcefully moved to. We are talking seven other girls here who forever will wonder why they suddenly have replaced another girl in a completely different universe. Is it really too much to ask to organize a meeting and letting everyone in on it and to be allowed to decide their own fate?
“The Stealer of Souls” and “Carol Oneir’s Hundredth Dream” are both Chrestomanci short stories and set after each other. The first features Cat and Tonino, the protagonist in The Magicians of Caprona and an evil enchanter who steals the souls of nine-lived enchanters. The second is about a daughter to a school friend to Chrestomanci. She can dream dreams that can be bottled and sold to be dreamt by others. It’s a very lucrative business, so when Carol suddenly becomes unable to dream, her parents seek Chersomanci’s help. I enjoy them both, even if they are short.
Howl’s Moving Castle Wynne Jones’ books didn’t get translated to Swedish until I was in my early teens. I had read Dogbody and The Lives of Christopher Chant and liked them, but it was with this book I fell in love with her writing. Here she plays with a number of fairy tales stock ingredients like “the evil step-mother” and “the lucky third child”, and puts them on their head. Sophie is the eldest daughter and already resigned to be a failure, but it all grow rather worse when she is bewitched into the shape of an old woman. She installs herself as cleaning lady to the evil wizard Howl, known to eat the soul of the maidens he has seduced. It turns out he isn’t really evil, but he is certainly a handful.
It’s such a fun and clever book, and I also enjoy that Sophie falls in love with Howl despite his faults and knowing he won’t change. And Howls fall in love with Sophie despite looking like an old woman. Granted he knows she is enchanted, and he has a suspicion on who she really is, but he doesn’t know. And, really, enchanted or not, Sophie really is 90 years old with aches and twinges for the majority of the book. How many fantasy books have a protagonist who is an old crone?
I actually started a chronological re-read a couple of years ago and read Wilkin’s Toot and The Ogre Downstairs (I jumped Changeover which I have never been able to get into.) But then I came to Dogsbody and the re-read halted. It’s not that it isn't a good book, but the abuse Kathleen suffers paired with cruelty to animals paired with the death of a beloved pet makes it a too tough read for me. I know Sirius doesn’t really die, but he does for Kathleen, and the book ends with them separated.
So I decided to re-read the Wynne Jones-books I only felt like I wanted to read. I started with Charmed Life which was the first Chrestomanci-novel written, even if it’s the third one in the series internal chronology. It’s also one of her books I have re-read the least. It’s definitely not one of her best. I like Cat, and I find his passivity and distrust believable as he has been used and influenced by his older sister his whole life. But I really dislike the way Janet gets to decide that she and all her counterpart are better off in the new worlds they have been forcefully moved to. We are talking seven other girls here who forever will wonder why they suddenly have replaced another girl in a completely different universe. Is it really too much to ask to organize a meeting and letting everyone in on it and to be allowed to decide their own fate?
“The Stealer of Souls” and “Carol Oneir’s Hundredth Dream” are both Chrestomanci short stories and set after each other. The first features Cat and Tonino, the protagonist in The Magicians of Caprona and an evil enchanter who steals the souls of nine-lived enchanters. The second is about a daughter to a school friend to Chrestomanci. She can dream dreams that can be bottled and sold to be dreamt by others. It’s a very lucrative business, so when Carol suddenly becomes unable to dream, her parents seek Chersomanci’s help. I enjoy them both, even if they are short.
Howl’s Moving Castle Wynne Jones’ books didn’t get translated to Swedish until I was in my early teens. I had read Dogbody and The Lives of Christopher Chant and liked them, but it was with this book I fell in love with her writing. Here she plays with a number of fairy tales stock ingredients like “the evil step-mother” and “the lucky third child”, and puts them on their head. Sophie is the eldest daughter and already resigned to be a failure, but it all grow rather worse when she is bewitched into the shape of an old woman. She installs herself as cleaning lady to the evil wizard Howl, known to eat the soul of the maidens he has seduced. It turns out he isn’t really evil, but he is certainly a handful.
It’s such a fun and clever book, and I also enjoy that Sophie falls in love with Howl despite his faults and knowing he won’t change. And Howls fall in love with Sophie despite looking like an old woman. Granted he knows she is enchanted, and he has a suspicion on who she really is, but he doesn’t know. And, really, enchanted or not, Sophie really is 90 years old with aches and twinges for the majority of the book. How many fantasy books have a protagonist who is an old crone?
no subject
Date: 2018-12-16 08:47 am (UTC)I'm curious if you've read Witch's Business (aka Wilkins' Tooth) or Hexwood?
Yes. The only Wynne Jones I haven't read is Changeover
no subject
Date: 2018-12-16 08:12 pm (UTC)I had to look up Gaudy Night as it didn't ring a bell, but I've always thought that I would like to try Sayers as I've already read quite a lot of Christie. Quick question, do the Wimsey books need to be read in order or are they fine any old way?
no subject
Date: 2018-12-17 07:37 am (UTC)Quick question, do the Wimsey books need to be read in order or are they fine any old way?
Yes and no. They are written in order and time progress; Lord Peter is 33 in the first novel and 45 in the last, but if you don't mind reading back and forth, then you can read most of them out of order. There are references to old cases but in a non-spoilery way. But I think Strong Poison, Have His Carcase, Gaudy Night and Busman's Honeymoon are best read in order. They have a love story as a second plot which I think would make better sense read in order. Gaudy Night also contains a spoiler for Unnatural Death.
I read the Harriet Vane-books first, for the sole reason it was the ones my parent owned, and the read rest wildly out of order. Whose Body, the very first one, is the weakest, and Five Red Herringss rather muddled, and I know people who started with those and then never read further. My personal favourites, apart from Gaudy Night are Nine Tailors and Murder Must Advertise.
no subject
Date: 2018-12-17 01:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2018-12-28 07:11 pm (UTC)