osprey_archer: (books)
osprey_archer ([personal profile] osprey_archer) wrote2021-12-09 07:14 pm

Book Review: Fire from Heaven

As I reported yesterday, I have AT LONG LAST finished Mary Renault's Fire from Heaven, which I have been reading since, God help me, August.

In the past I've sort of informally sorted war books along an axis, based on their attitude from war, which axis runs from BRUTAL to GLORIOUS. During Fire from Heaven, it occurred to me, perhaps belatedly, that these are properly two separate axes: brutal to not-brutal and glorious to not-glorious. These axes should be overlaid to form four quadrants of war stories.

So, on the glorious/not-brutal quadrant, you have classic boy's own war adventures. On brutal/not-glorious, you've got things like All Quiet on the Western Front. And then you've got Fire from Heaven, which is in the "war is brutal AND glorious" quadrant."

In a sense this is unavoidable: it's a book about Alexander the Great, who is Great because he conquered a swathe of the known world, and this is not a book that is trying to complicate your understanding of whether that is truly Great. This is a book about how Alexander is the bee's knees, and although war is brutal (I wouldn't say that Renault lingers unduly on the brutality, but there is a certain "this is not a boy's own story" emphasis on its presence) this does not, somehow, mean it is not glorious. In fact, brutality and glory may be inseparable.

For many modern readers, and by "many modern readers" I of course mean myself, this is an alien view. Frankly, I probably found it as challenging as many of her early readers may have found her positive depiction of Alexander and Hephaistion's love affair. (This is adorable and does not take up a lot of page time.) I was not, unfortunately, in the mood to be challenged, particularly not on this particular topic, because I read so many war books over the past year that I am honestly just tired of war right now, so whenever Alexander marched to the cusp of another brutal yet glorious battle I screeched to a halt, hence the fact that it took me four months to read the darn book.

Possibly I'm just not the right audience for historical fiction about world conquerors. I should keep this in mind if I ever run across a novel about Napoleon.

***

ALSO, does Mary Renault have an Oedipus complex kink, or DOES she have an Oedipus complex kink? It had not occurred to me that this could be a thing, but I've read four of her novels now, and the Oedipal thing is ALL over three of them, and the fourth one has female main characters, so there's really no place to shove in an Oedipal complex, but let's be real, The Friendly Young Ladies had MORE than enough going on already.

1. In The Charioteer, baby!Laurie asks his mother to marry him. They grow up to have an arrestingly dysfunctional relationship during which she's more or less constantly telling him to stop having feelings about things like "you put my beloved dog down because he was inconvenient." (At one point Laurie, apparently with no sense of irony, tells Ralph "my mother's pretty well-balanced." Laurie. Laurie. IS SHE, Laurie?)

2. In The Last of the Wine, Alexias's father accuses him of sleeping with his hot young stepmother and Alexias runs away into the hills SO far and SO fast that he almost DIES and then collapses, sobbing, because although the accusation is not literally true it is true in his HEART. And then he gets his first girlfriend, who is literally old enough to be his mother.

3. In Fire from Heaven, baby!Alexander (like Laurie!) asks his mother to marry him, AND ALSO spends most of the book seesawing about whether or not he wants to kill his father, before finally deciding that his father is NOT his father so patricide is not technically patricide and is, therefore, okay, probably. But then his father dies of other causes anyway.

In a way it is futile to ask why an author kinks on certain things, but also WHY. WHY, MARY.

I scream this to the heavens as if it is going to in any way hinder me from reading more Renault books. It definitely will not. I will continue reading them and then shrieking like an incoherent dolphin.

...But probably these further Renault readings will take place after a break of some months because honestly I am SO tired of war books right now. I've read so many. I just want to read books about books and savor the quiet life among people who are not leading any conquering armies at all.
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2021-12-10 04:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Altho to be fair, she wrote it like a year before her death, and there's a big change from the first part, which is depressing but readable, to the second part which takes place after a big timeskip and tries to tell way too much history in too few pages. I always wonder if there was a big break in the writing of the book, or if she just pushed herself too hard trying to make sure she finished it.
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2021-12-10 07:55 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I don't have the heart to look it up now, but from what I remember of the Sweetman biography (which is now THIRTY YEARS OLD, hang me up on the wall in a bag) her dying was really tough. I also seem to remember a lot of clashes with her mother, and then her father died of cancer and she nursed him but he couldn't talk. The description was vivid and awful.
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2021-12-10 08:00 pm (UTC)(link)
(There's a more recent biography, from 2001, by a woman, and I have it but haven't read it yet. It is Somewhere In This Apartment.)
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2021-12-10 08:32 pm (UTC)(link)
LOL it is the location of all my books when I don't know where they are. I am guessing it is in a pile in the bedroom because I think I bought it this year. Or last year? If I bought it last year it might be in the living room. There's just....so many books in here.

My automatic bias would be for the more recent bio written by a woman, but IIRC the Sweetman bio is really well-written and has a lot of excerpts from her letters.