luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)
[personal profile] luzula
The Ghosts of Glencoe by Mollie Hunter (1966)
Oh, this is excellent! I loved it; highly recommended to fans of D K Broster, Rosemary Sutcliff, and Kidnapped. It is not quite 'what if Keith and Ewen, but at the massacre of Glencoe?' but it certainly has elements of that. Robert Stewart is a young ensign stationed at Fort William in the winter of 1691-92, and is one of the party of soldiers quartered among the Glencoe MacDonalds—but he has no idea about the atrocities that are planned. During those two weeks, he makes friends with the chief's son Alasdair, and when he gets his orders, he has to decide whether to defy them or obey (I think we can all guess what he does, but the manner in which he does it is still very suspenseful!). Like Keith, young Robert ardently wants a military career and to follow in his father's footsteps, but unlike Keith, he has divided loyalties from the start. He's an Appin Stewart, but he grew up abroad with his father, who served in William of Orange's Scottish regiment in the Low Countries. His parents are dead when the story begins. Besides the excellent conflict of loyalties, this is also a great adventure story of winter survival while being chased by redcoats. The very end is perhaps resolved a little too easily, but then it is a YA book. It's available on archive.org, but it's also not hard to get hold of cheap secondhand copies. Go on, you can buy it for $1!

Emma by Jane Austen (1815)
Finishing off my Austen re-listen, with this excellent reading by Elizabeth Klett from Librivox. Emma is one of my least favorite Austens. To start with the positive, it does have the most femslash possibility, since she pours a lot of energy into relationships with female companions. If I could give her an alternate ending, it would be for her to find a female companion who can hold her own against Emma's strong personality and challenge her a bit--and of course Emma has the economic means to live like that. But I don't think any of the other women in the book would work. There are also some wonderfully observed social situations, such as the one with the in-law friction between Emma's father and brother-in-law, where Emma and her sister do all the emotional labor of smoothing things over.

And then to what I don't enjoy: it's not that I actually like Emma that much, but to have the whole plot set up to teach her a lesson and then for her to marry the older man who was always right when Emma was wrong, it just grates on me. Ugh, and then he talks patronizingly about what Emma was like when she was a child, and says that he fell in love with her when she was thirteen (when he was what, thirty?). I don't ship Jane Fairfax/Frank Churchill either--I think he's quite cruel to her during that extended period of secret engagement. Also, there's more snobbishness than in for example Persuasion. However, it's not like it's a hardship to do the dishes and do my physical therapy with Austen prose in my ears, so I don't regret the relisten!

My Austen ranking, based purely on enjoyment: Pride & Prejudice - Persuasion - Mansfield Park - Northanger Abbey - Sense & Sensibility - Emma. What is yours?
yhlee: German rapier (mostly the hilt) (rapier)
From: [personal profile] yhlee
:slides in: I have heard a lot about Rosemary Sutcliff but do not know where to start! Do you have recs on this front?

(I like Roman military history and military history generally, open to other things!)
yhlee: German rapier (mostly the hilt) (rapier)
From: [personal profile] yhlee
Thank you so much! My library has Eagle of the Ninth so I'll see if I can get it tomorrow, or one of the other ones you mention. :D

optional follow-up question: Oh - with the 17th century British ones, is this a case where I should be able to read a Wikipedia overview to get the gist of the historical events, or would I need more background to follow the books? (I'm USAn and I had a somewhat atypical education because I went to an international high school in S Korea, so there's this giant gap in my European history knowledge between ~1500 or so and, uh, the Great War.)

(Mind you, an excuse to read up on 17th century history sounds delightful. :D )
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