Three things on a Sunday afternoon
Sep. 13th, 2020 02:52 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
This is one of those posts about unrelated things, none of which I feel really warrants a post of its own.
I stumbled across this excellent post by Ada Palmer on her blog. On the surface of things, it's about the two recent TV series about the Borgias, but what it's really about is being a professional historian (or someone who has deep historical knowledge about specific time periods), and learning to switch off that part of the brain when engaging with historical fiction. I really love the way Palmer writes — I haven't seen either series, but this doesn't matter, as her writing draws you in, no matter what the subject.
I've hit a bit of a reading slump, and it hasn't helped that the book I was reading, The Library of the Unwritten by AJ Hackwith, sounded cool in terms of concept (a librarian who spends the afterlife preserving and collecting all unwritten books, for the library of Hell), but really didn't work for me in terms of execution. It's the sort of book about books, stories, authors and bookishness that I think I would have adored fifteen years ago, but with which I am swiftly losing patience — the literary equivalent of Oscar-baity films about Hollywood. (Other recent examples of this subgenre of fantasy novel which I also found tooth-gratingly irritating include The Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E Harrow, and The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern (both of which were, indeed, pushed at me by Goodreads when I marked The Library of the Unwritten as 'read'.) I think it doesn't help that these types of stories have a tendency to be extremely twee — this wasn't as bad in that regard as Harrow's writing, but it was still too treacly for my tastes. I wanted more celestial and infernal politics, and less pontificating about the power of stories.
Talk to me about Yuletide! Who is planning to participate this year? What fandoms are you thinking of nominating? Nominations coordination in the comments is most welcome!
no subject
Date: 2020-09-13 02:53 pm (UTC)As for Yuletide, I'm definitely nominating "Campaign: Skyjacks", but not entirely sure about the other two. Possibly "Bloodrights" and "Kingdom of Gods," same as last year, but I should probably reread the books and I'd rather read new books atm.
no subject
Date: 2020-09-13 04:17 pm (UTC)I hadn't heard of any of your potential nominations, but I don't necessarily think it's a requirement to reread the books unless you're planning to write in those fandoms as well. I don't know if you nominate to request, to offer, or some combination of the two. (As for me, I nominate to request, because I know that it's almost certain that no one else will request a fandom I've nominated, and there's usually a bunch of other things in the tagset that I'm happy to offer.) But obviously you should do what feels most comfortable.
no subject
Date: 2020-09-13 06:42 pm (UTC)I nominate to request. You might be right that it's not necessary to reread them before nominating; I'd just like to reread them before writing my requests.
no subject
Date: 2020-09-13 07:08 pm (UTC)Another panelist mentioned that many books written about "libraries" don't actually know what libraries are/are for and mix them up with e.g. archives, and several panelists definitely looked caught out
Hahahahaha! There are actually quite a few published authors who also work in libraries, although I don't think that libraries feature very heavily in their work.