Recent reading
Jan. 9th, 2023 08:54 pmJill, by E A Dillwyn (1884)
Reread for Yuletide writing, which for obvious reasons I didn't write up before. I've now read this book twice, once as proofreading for Gutenberg, and the second time for the purpose of writing Jill/Kitty fic. Those are two very different ways of reading, and both are different from simply reading for pleasure! I confess that I did skim some parts, especially where Jill is in the dog household...
Narrative of the Most Extraordinary and Distressing Shipwreck of the Whale-Ship Essex, of Nantucket: Which Was Attacked and Finally Destroyed by a Large Spermaceti-Whale, in the Pacific Ocean; With an Account of the Unparalleled Sufferings of the Captain and Crew During a Space of Ninety-Three Days at Sea, in Open Boats, in the Years 1819 & 1820, by Owen Chase
Recced by
sanguinity. I listened to this as a Librivox audiobook, which was a good choice! I liked the reader, and it was a riveting story of survival. At one point, the writer refers to the actions of the whale as taking revenge for the whaling they are doing, and I couldn't help interpreting it that way, too, especially as it is stated in the beginning that whales are becoming more rare and they have to go farther and farther for them. And then, there's the bit where he cheerfully talks about stacking the hold with Galapagos turtles as victuals, and how great it is that they can survive for a year with no water or food, and thus keep fresh...OMG, those poor tortured turtles! It does rather echo the tortures of the poor shipwrecked sailors, having to ration their water and food...
The Prisoner of Zenda by Anthony Hope (1894)
Listened to as audiobook, for which it was suited. The original Ruritanian romance; it was a fun swashbuckling romp, but not one that left a huge impression. I am not really convinced it was worth so much work to keep that king on his throne; he seemed a bit of an incompetent drunkard. There's some fun enemyslash—not really the type that I most prefer, with two people who respect each other caught on opposite sides—but more the type that leads to hatesex. But it is kind of hilarious how the narrator can't help remarking every time about Rupert of Hentzau what a handsome and dashing and debonair villain he is... I do, however, think that two Rudolfs and one Rupert is a bit much for one book.
Checking out AO3, I enjoyed this bit of slash, inserted into the interstices of canon! (Although really, I would not choose have sex with someone who tried to stab me to death mid-seduction the previous time...) But surprisingly enough, the longest fic for the canon is some novel-length original femslash. And of course, there's K J Charles' published fanfic The Henchmen of Zenda, which I will certainly read.
Reread for Yuletide writing, which for obvious reasons I didn't write up before. I've now read this book twice, once as proofreading for Gutenberg, and the second time for the purpose of writing Jill/Kitty fic. Those are two very different ways of reading, and both are different from simply reading for pleasure! I confess that I did skim some parts, especially where Jill is in the dog household...
Narrative of the Most Extraordinary and Distressing Shipwreck of the Whale-Ship Essex, of Nantucket: Which Was Attacked and Finally Destroyed by a Large Spermaceti-Whale, in the Pacific Ocean; With an Account of the Unparalleled Sufferings of the Captain and Crew During a Space of Ninety-Three Days at Sea, in Open Boats, in the Years 1819 & 1820, by Owen Chase
Recced by
The Prisoner of Zenda by Anthony Hope (1894)
Listened to as audiobook, for which it was suited. The original Ruritanian romance; it was a fun swashbuckling romp, but not one that left a huge impression. I am not really convinced it was worth so much work to keep that king on his throne; he seemed a bit of an incompetent drunkard. There's some fun enemyslash—not really the type that I most prefer, with two people who respect each other caught on opposite sides—but more the type that leads to hatesex. But it is kind of hilarious how the narrator can't help remarking every time about Rupert of Hentzau what a handsome and dashing and debonair villain he is... I do, however, think that two Rudolfs and one Rupert is a bit much for one book.
Checking out AO3, I enjoyed this bit of slash, inserted into the interstices of canon! (Although really, I would not choose have sex with someone who tried to stab me to death mid-seduction the previous time...) But surprisingly enough, the longest fic for the canon is some novel-length original femslash. And of course, there's K J Charles' published fanfic The Henchmen of Zenda, which I will certainly read.
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-09 08:41 pm (UTC)And I definitely agree with you about Zenda-- I found myself questioning why they're doing so much work to preserve the monarchy when the king really isn't up to the task-- and it seems like we're not alone! http://www.silverwhistle.co.uk/ruritania/
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-09 10:14 pm (UTC)I am... intrigued. I might have to download this just so I can share the ten-page dog digression with my wife.
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-10 07:30 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-10 08:21 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-10 07:25 pm (UTC)Hee, thanks for that link. *g*
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-09 10:29 pm (UTC)At one point, the writer refers to the actions of the whale as taking revenge for the whaling they are doing, and I couldn't help interpreting it that way, too, especially as it is stated in the beginning that whales are becoming more rare and they have to go farther and farther for them.
Some researchers studying Atlantic and Pacific whaling logs of the era recently claimed to be able to demonstrate that not only were whale pods learning about whaling ships and becoming savvy to their ways (SWIM UPWIND SO THEY CAN'T PURSUE YOU EFFECTIVELY), they were also communicating this info to pods who hadn't encountered the whaling ships yet. So yes, there's some basis to believe that this whale was acting with complex and knowledgeable intent. I felt bad for the poor attacking whale; it evidently stunned itself in taking down the whaleship. It can sink a ship, but only at marked cost to itself.
Prisoner of Zenda: Word re whether whatshisname deserves to sit on the throne. There's def some uncritical royalism underpinning that book. Although I suppose if the guy gives you a good dinner/party, it's only courteous to preserve his throne for him?
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-10 05:09 pm (UTC)That is fascinating! Clever animals.
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-10 07:29 pm (UTC)Although I suppose if the guy gives you a good dinner/party, it's only courteous to preserve his throne for him?
The narrator seemed to think so...he certainly made a snap decision!
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-10 08:26 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-10 09:15 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-09 11:15 pm (UTC)(The dogs part cracked me up.)
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-11 07:42 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-09 11:57 pm (UTC)Prisoner of Zenda - much more cheerful, but poor Flavia has a very miserable time ahead of her, rather like Tar-Miriel in the published Akallabeth. I hadn't thought of all those "R"s but you're quite right about that! Both the films are worth watching, incidentally - they're great fun though weirdly similar (not inappropriately) and yes, you can see the UST!
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-11 07:48 pm (UTC)IMDB tells me there are films from 1937 and 1952, a TV mini series from the 80s, and also a 1979 comedy… but I'm a bad movie watcher, and probably won't get around to watching any of them.
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-13 12:16 am (UTC)The pre and postwar Zenda films are good inconsequential fun, though spookily similar; but I'm not surprised to hear that you're not a film person, considering your audio adventures!
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-10 10:48 am (UTC)The whaling book sounds great. I once translated a YA book from Finnish about Basque whalers who were murdered in Iceland in 1615. I had to research a lot about how they gutted whales. Fortunately no turtles were involved at least.
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-11 07:49 pm (UTC)Huh, a story about Basque whalers on Iceland is not something I would expect to have been written in Finnish.
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-10 05:06 pm (UTC)Poor turtles! I was just reading a book in which the narrator, in early nineteenth-century Ayrshire, describes a turtle being bought from a Glasgow merchant and delivered still alive—I wonder what it had had to endure to go all that way :( That's very interesting about the idea of the whale taking revenge, too—well, interesting and depressing that whalers at that period were already aware that whales were getting rarer and that this was something that might be seen as deserving of revenge...
The Prisoner of Zenda does sound fun, if dubiously royalist (I suppose it's a bit different if the main characters are merely supporters of monarchs like the Jacobites and the Hanoverians, vs. actually being the monarch and bad at it!).
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-11 07:59 pm (UTC)The Zenda book does actually lampshade the fact that the king isn't the greatest…but the character saying that implies that the main character should have been king instead! He does seem marginally better, but he isn't that great either.
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-10 08:28 pm (UTC)I may have mentioned this before, but I am a huge fan of The Henchmen of Zenda. Probably my favourite KJ Charles novel. It's not enemyslash at all but rather people-on-the-same-side-who-don't-know-if-they-can-trust-each-other-slash. And the two Rudolfs hardly feature at all!
I do, however, think that two Rudolfs and one Rupert is a bit much for one book.
Haha, yes.
(no subject)
Date: 2023-01-11 08:01 pm (UTC)