I had deliberately not re-read Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows before seeing the first installment of the film, because I was afraid that doing so would make me one of Those Fans; hyper-critical and whiny about all my favorite parts being left out. As I left the movie theater though, I was plagued by one question: "I did read this book, right?" I remembered a lot of running around in the woods and I remembered being a wreck at a certain point about 30 pages before the end, but I didn't remember most of what happened in the film. I definitely didn't remember the Ministry = Nazis, Muggles=Jews allusion being quite so heavy-handed,
So it seemed a re-read was in order, if only so I can whine and complain when the second part comes out this summer. Maybe I was wearing rose-colored glasses from the film, which I liked a lot, but DH is a better book than I remember it being. The extended travelogue through the woods of England didn't drag so much, the house elves weren't as annoying, and the last fifty pages are as wrenching and satisfying as the conclusion to any epic could hope to be.
As for the complaints/hopes/predictions for Part Two, I have only this to say: Steve Kloves, you better do right by Alan Rickman. You just better.
Bibliocat!
Sunday, January 23, 2011
An Egyptian Binge
Since I ran through Michelle Moran's trilogy in record time, I was jonesing for a fix of fiction based in (or on) ancient Egypt. I guess I can thank Seshat (Egyptian goddess of reading) for putting these two books in my path.
Lily of the Nile by Stephanie Dray is another take on the life of the daughter of Cleopatra and Marc Antony, Cleopatra Selene. Like Moran's Cleopatra's Daughter, the story begins with the death of Selene's parents and ends with her betrothal to Juba II, the deposed Numidian prince who would become King of Mauretania. (I can't begin to tell you how much I've learned about ancient geography from Googling these defunct kingdoms!) Dray's story, though, has a much more mystical bent. Selene receives messages from Isis, her mother's patron goddess, through hieroglyphics that magically (and painfully) appear on her skin. After her initial horror, she begins to use the messages to secure her place in Octavian's kingdom, turning the emperor's fear and revulsion of Cleopatra into dependence on her daughter.
I liked the goddess-y tone of the book and the information about ancient religious practices, but in most other ways Dray's novel fell short of Moran's. Neither Selene nor Juba's character was as interesting this time around (you will recall my wicked Dead Guy crush on Juba after reading Cleopatra's Daughter) and, in fact, most of the characters were rather flat. In fact, the character I found most intriguing and layered was Octavian. And he's supposed to be the bad guy. That being said, I liked the magical realism enough that I will read Dray's future work (she's planning this to be the first in a trilogy) and wish I could be at Smith College in March, when she is giving a lecture on "Bad Girls of the Ancient World." I bet Cleo and Hatshepsut could teach these reality-TV wannabes a thing or two!
How excited was I when I found out that Rick Riordan, late of the Percy Jackson series, was starting another series based on Egyptian gods? Excited enough to brave the subway on the weekend (those of you who live in NYC will know what an ordeal that can be) to get my copy of The Red Pyramid the very same day.
Riordan did not let me down this time. I won't go into too much detail because some of my students read this blog and will also want to read the book, and I don't want to give away too much. In a nutshell: Fourteen-year-old Carter Kane has been traveling the world with his dad, a famed Egyptologist, for the six years since his mother died in a mysterious event at Cleopatra's Needle in London. On the one day of the year that he gets to spend with his estranged little sister Sadie, his dad breaks into the museum, breaks the Rosetta Stone, and releases Set, the god of chaos (among others) into the world. And that's just the first 15 pages!
Effectively orphaned, Carter and Sadie set out on a quest to find and rescue their dad, aided by their mysterious uncle Amos and the human incarnation of the cat goddess Bastet. (Although here, her name is shortened to Bast.) Their opponents? An ancient order called the House of Life who wants to keep the gods in their "proper" place, and of course, that badass Set himself. Along the way, they find out that their family has a Very Special Connection to the top three gods of Egypt (Osiris, Isis, and Horus).
Riordan's trademark sardonic narration, in-jokes, and top notch research just add to a ripping good story. Lesser authors might've fallen into the trap of using the same conceit as the Percy series (half-mortal children of gods as protagonists) but he manages to put a fresh spin on the relationship-to-the-ancients theme. I finished The Red Pyramid in two days, and can't wait till the next one comes out in May.
Seshat |
Lily of the Nile by Stephanie Dray is another take on the life of the daughter of Cleopatra and Marc Antony, Cleopatra Selene. Like Moran's Cleopatra's Daughter, the story begins with the death of Selene's parents and ends with her betrothal to Juba II, the deposed Numidian prince who would become King of Mauretania. (I can't begin to tell you how much I've learned about ancient geography from Googling these defunct kingdoms!) Dray's story, though, has a much more mystical bent. Selene receives messages from Isis, her mother's patron goddess, through hieroglyphics that magically (and painfully) appear on her skin. After her initial horror, she begins to use the messages to secure her place in Octavian's kingdom, turning the emperor's fear and revulsion of Cleopatra into dependence on her daughter.
I liked the goddess-y tone of the book and the information about ancient religious practices, but in most other ways Dray's novel fell short of Moran's. Neither Selene nor Juba's character was as interesting this time around (you will recall my wicked Dead Guy crush on Juba after reading Cleopatra's Daughter) and, in fact, most of the characters were rather flat. In fact, the character I found most intriguing and layered was Octavian. And he's supposed to be the bad guy. That being said, I liked the magical realism enough that I will read Dray's future work (she's planning this to be the first in a trilogy) and wish I could be at Smith College in March, when she is giving a lecture on "Bad Girls of the Ancient World." I bet Cleo and Hatshepsut could teach these reality-TV wannabes a thing or two!
How excited was I when I found out that Rick Riordan, late of the Percy Jackson series, was starting another series based on Egyptian gods? Excited enough to brave the subway on the weekend (those of you who live in NYC will know what an ordeal that can be) to get my copy of The Red Pyramid the very same day.
Riordan did not let me down this time. I won't go into too much detail because some of my students read this blog and will also want to read the book, and I don't want to give away too much. In a nutshell: Fourteen-year-old Carter Kane has been traveling the world with his dad, a famed Egyptologist, for the six years since his mother died in a mysterious event at Cleopatra's Needle in London. On the one day of the year that he gets to spend with his estranged little sister Sadie, his dad breaks into the museum, breaks the Rosetta Stone, and releases Set, the god of chaos (among others) into the world. And that's just the first 15 pages!
Effectively orphaned, Carter and Sadie set out on a quest to find and rescue their dad, aided by their mysterious uncle Amos and the human incarnation of the cat goddess Bastet. (Although here, her name is shortened to Bast.) Their opponents? An ancient order called the House of Life who wants to keep the gods in their "proper" place, and of course, that badass Set himself. Along the way, they find out that their family has a Very Special Connection to the top three gods of Egypt (Osiris, Isis, and Horus).
Riordan's trademark sardonic narration, in-jokes, and top notch research just add to a ripping good story. Lesser authors might've fallen into the trap of using the same conceit as the Percy series (half-mortal children of gods as protagonists) but he manages to put a fresh spin on the relationship-to-the-ancients theme. I finished The Red Pyramid in two days, and can't wait till the next one comes out in May.
Sunday, January 9, 2011
The Master Still Has It
I've been reading Stephen King since...well, since I was probably too young to be reading Stephen King! I read The Shining in 7th grade, and at least part of Carrie well before that. Dude has probably been publishing since before I was born, and he hasn't lost a bit of his magic....in fact, I think that the writing he's done since his brief "retirement" is the best he's ever done. I also think that King is most effective in concentrated form- short stories and novellas - a belief that Full Dark, No Stars supports in grand style.
In the author's notes to this collection of four pieces (one could call them long short stories or short-short novels) he says that he likes to write about "ordinary people dealing with extraordinary circumstances." That is one thing that he does extremely well. Another thing he consistently blows me away by doing is by taking a common, tried-and-true motif and making it fresh and surprising. Full Dark, No Stars includes King's spin on the ghost story, the vigilante justice story, the Faustian deal-with-the-devil story, and the spouse discovering that his/her partner has been leading a secret life story. In all but one, he creates unexpected but utterly plausible twists to make the "oldest story in the world" unpredictable.
Big Driver (the vigilante justice story) is the most satisying of the stories. It has a likeable protagonist, heart-pounding action, and seems terrifyingly possible. The ghost story, 1922, is the least, and also the longest. In Danse Macabre, King said that "Terror is the finest emotion. If I can't terrify, I will aim to horrify. If I can't horrify, I'll go for the gross-out." 1922 goes for the gross-out, and that detracts from what could have been a superb ghost story. It is also the most predictable of the collection.
The other three, however, are a dark delight...not least because the author's joy in storytelling is evident in every word. There may indeed be no new stories in the world, but Stephen King seems to always find new ways to tell them.
In the author's notes to this collection of four pieces (one could call them long short stories or short-short novels) he says that he likes to write about "ordinary people dealing with extraordinary circumstances." That is one thing that he does extremely well. Another thing he consistently blows me away by doing is by taking a common, tried-and-true motif and making it fresh and surprising. Full Dark, No Stars includes King's spin on the ghost story, the vigilante justice story, the Faustian deal-with-the-devil story, and the spouse discovering that his/her partner has been leading a secret life story. In all but one, he creates unexpected but utterly plausible twists to make the "oldest story in the world" unpredictable.
Big Driver (the vigilante justice story) is the most satisying of the stories. It has a likeable protagonist, heart-pounding action, and seems terrifyingly possible. The ghost story, 1922, is the least, and also the longest. In Danse Macabre, King said that "Terror is the finest emotion. If I can't terrify, I will aim to horrify. If I can't horrify, I'll go for the gross-out." 1922 goes for the gross-out, and that detracts from what could have been a superb ghost story. It is also the most predictable of the collection.
The other three, however, are a dark delight...not least because the author's joy in storytelling is evident in every word. There may indeed be no new stories in the world, but Stephen King seems to always find new ways to tell them.
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