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I’m leaving for my trip to Massachusetts tomorrow! So I’m posting my Wednesday Reading Meme today to sweep the decks clean before I go.

What I’ve Just Finished Reading

[personal profile] littlerhymes and I finished Mary Stewart’s The Last Enchantment, the final book of the original Merlin trilogy, although Stewart went ahead and published a fourth book a few years later. The Last Enchantment nonetheless feels like a conclusion - I’d be certainly very surprised if Merlin narrates the next book - for it takes us through the end of Merlin’s story, and indeed beyond the usual end: he’s buried alive in his crystal cave, as is his usual end, but here he’s rescued and at the end of the book is living in retirement, an old man tired yet content, frequently visited by the king.

We were particularly interested in the book’s ambiguous treatment of Nimue. Is she truly in love with Merlin? Pretending to love him to steal his power? Not stealing his power at all, but learning all his skills so she can take up his mantel as Arthur’s sorcerer, just as Merlin bade her?

Pat Barker’s The Ghost Road, the third book in the Regeneration trilogy, alternates between Billy Prior, who is headed back to the front now that he’s been released from Craiglockhart, and his counselor Rivers, who spends most of the book ill to the point of delirium, recollecting his fieldwork among the headhunters of Melanesia. The colonial rulers of Melanesia had forbidden headhunting, and because their entire culture had been organized around the headhunt, they were basically pining away in despair.

Rivers doesn’t draw a direct parallel, but there’s clearly a meditation here about war as a bearer of cultural meaning - whose cultural meaning is perhaps divorced from anything that a reasonable person might consider a “war aim.” The point of the headhunt is the headhunt. It’s not meant to win territory or settle a point of politics by other means or Defeat Autocracy; the point is to take heads. We’re here because we’re here because we’re here because we’re here.

Spoilers )

Nghi Vo’s When the Tiger Came Down the Mountain is a sequel to The Empress of Salt and Fortune, also featuring a cleric who travels the countryside collecting knowledge/stories, also very concerned with how stories change depending who tell them. In this case, Chih is telling the story of a human-tiger romance to a trio of tigers who may eat them… or might leave Chih alive to go home and correct the record with what the tigers consider the real version, although they are grumpily aware that Chih will probably just put it down as a competing version, equal in weight with the clearly incorrect human story!

Finally, there’s a new Baby-Sitters Club graphic novel out! Jessi’s Secret Language is one that I read as a kid (in general I read all the Very Special Episode books about disabilities), and it was fun to revisit it now, especially because I’ve actually seen a production of Coppelia, the ballet that Jessi stars in. In fact, I think my desire to see that ballet stems from this book! (Almost all my other ballet feelings come from Princess Tutu. Someday I WILL see Swan Lake and Giselle.)

What I’m Reading Now

In Dracula, Dracula has end-run our heroes! They have now split up to chase him, one team by land and one by waterway… Will they be able to kill him before he reaches his castle stronghold??

What I Plan to Read Next

To my distress, I have discovered that I weeded Jane Langton’s The Diamond in the Window from my collection! So I’ll only be taking The Fledgling and the recently-acquired The Astonishing Stereoscope to Massachusetts with me.
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What I’ve Just Finished Reading

Took a little break from the Great War to read Nghi Vo’s The Empress of Salt and Fortune. I really enjoyed the way that the story spun itself out from objects - a set of fortune-telling sticks sets off one set of reminiscences, tokens from temple visits another, etc. It reminded me in a way of Laurel Thatcher Ulrich’s The Age of Homespun, although of course it’s the fictional history of an empire instead of a nonfiction book exploring women’s lives in preindustrial America; but the books share both an interest in women’s lives and this structure of spinning off the story from material objects.

I also read Darcie Little Badger’s Elatsoe. Our heroine, Ellie, is a Lipan Apache girl with a knack for summoning dead animals (dead people invariably Come Back Wrong and are better left alone), which she needs to put to good use when her cousin dies in mysterious circumstances. This is marketed as YA but really reads more middle grade, which is a puzzling marketing decision but an asset for me personally, as I love middle grade books. But although I enjoyed this book, I also felt it needed a bit more oomph.

What I’m Reading Now

You will be thrilled to know that I’ve started Mary Renault’s Fire from Heaven and it kicks off with four-year-old Alexander the Great telling his mother that he wants to marry her. I realize this is a thing that small children sometimes do, but there is a way to do it so it’s a cute kid thing and then there’s a way to do it as an Oedipal Moment (Alexander even thinks about killing his dad!), Full of Sensuality and Portent, and Renault went all out for the latter. I guess it’s nice that she so fully embraced her Oedipus complex kink.

Still working (slowly) on Nick Lloyd’s The Western Front: A History of the Great War, 1914-1918. I’m in 1916 and it’s a little bit like watching an avalanche: even kings and presidents and generals have very little control over what is happening, and keep attempting to strike what they devoutly hope will be knockout blows… only the other side just won’t say die.

What I Plan to Read Next

GUESS WHOSE FUCKING INTERLIBRARY LOAN ON D. K. BROSTER’S FLIGHT OF THE HERON JUST ARRIVED.

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