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Someday I will have the mental energy for a proper Dreamwidth post, but that day is not today. Instead, this is something of a drive-by post to alert anyone that's interested to a live event that Katherine Arden is doing via Instagram tonight.
She's going to talk via Instagram Live (so it's a free event, although I would assume you need an Instagram account to watch) about mortal/immortal romance in fiction. Given that mortal/immortal romance is basically my favourite kind of fictional romance, and the specific mortal/immortal romance in Arden's Winternight trilogy is one of my very favourite examples, I am delighted.
Unfortunately, at 7pm EST this event is a bit too late for me (in the UK) on a weeknight, so I'm hoping it will be recorded, but for those who are interested, and in a better timezone, check it out! Arden's Instagram account is
arden_katherine.
She's going to talk via Instagram Live (so it's a free event, although I would assume you need an Instagram account to watch) about mortal/immortal romance in fiction. Given that mortal/immortal romance is basically my favourite kind of fictional romance, and the specific mortal/immortal romance in Arden's Winternight trilogy is one of my very favourite examples, I am delighted.
Unfortunately, at 7pm EST this event is a bit too late for me (in the UK) on a weeknight, so I'm hoping it will be recorded, but for those who are interested, and in a better timezone, check it out! Arden's Instagram account is
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Date: 2021-01-14 09:10 pm (UTC)ooh, tell me more?
I do hope it'll show up online later too! It sounds really interesting.
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Date: 2021-01-15 02:34 pm (UTC)I think this is because most fictional romantic relationships, unless they're written as an established relationship, tend to have some kind of obstacle for the characters to overcome before they get together, and incompatible lifespans is a pretty fundamental obstacle, and it affects so many other things. (Apart from anything else, beings who do not die, and who have lived/existed for thousands or even millions of years, will have such a different understanding of history, humanity, mortality, the passage of time, and even morality than human beings, whose lives are finite.) I love seeing the way different pairings try to navigate this, and come to terms with their extremely different perspectives and experiences.
I also really like it if these relationships are depicted in such a way that it's clear the attraction is connected to these characters' utter difference (so the human character falls in love in part with the other's inhumanity, and the immortal falls in love in part with the human character's mortality) and that they change each other, slightly — the immortal becoming more human, and the human becoming more monstrous. I could read that trope forever.
On the other hand, I hate hate hate stories that try to resolve the inherent problem of such relationships (one character is going to die, and the other one will basically live on without them, forever) by turning the immortal character human, or giving immortality to the human character (e.g. getting turned into a vampire by their vampire boyfriend).
I love your title quote!
It's a quote from the first Katherine Arden book in the Winternight trilogy, and refers to the mortal/immortal relationship in question. I really love the quote too!
I do hope it'll show up online later too! It sounds really interesting.
I think she has said that it was recorded and will be uploaded at some point. When that happens, I'll link it on my blog.
Edited to add that she had internet problems and therefore it didn't get saved unfortunately.
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Date: 2021-01-15 04:32 pm (UTC)On the other hand, I hate hate hate stories that try to resolve the inherent problem of such relationships (one character is going to die, and the other one will basically live on without them, forever) by turning the immortal character human, or giving immortality to the human character (e.g. getting turned into a vampire by their vampire boyfriend).
Oh, poor you! You must hate the majority of the instances of this trope in fiction because I feel like most of them take one of those two routes!
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Date: 2021-01-16 03:47 pm (UTC)Unfortunately, you're right. I'll read pretty much anything if it looks like there's going to be a mortal/immortal relationship involved, which means I have read a lot of dreck over the years. I keep a sort of mental list of the stories that don't end in the way I dislike. Offhand, the ones that don't take either of the two routes include the Winterheart books, Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik, Sarah Rees Brennan's Demon's Lexicon series, most of Holly Black's books (she and I seem to basically share a brain when it comes to this trope), and Samantha Shannon's Bone Season series (although this is incomplete and I'm a little dubious about where the relationship is heading, given some things Shannon has hinted at on social media). There's also an Australian fantasy series called The Chaos Crystal about a suicidal immortal which almost ends the way I want, but takes a turn into the bizarre and absurd at the last minute in a really frustrating way.
Weirdly, although none of the relationships in Buffy are particularly happy or healthy, it handles this trope pretty well in regard to Buffy's relationships with vampires (although of course because the relationships are also being used as metaphors for other things, there is tension related to stuff other than the fact that Buffy is human and her boyfriends are immortal). I also feel that if Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles hadn't been cancelled, it would have done interesting things with the trope as well.
What I really want to see (but for which I can't think of any examples off the top of my head) are stories about human beings falling in love with the deities that they worship, and the weirdness that would ensue, particularly regarding their own attitudes about religion. (I mean, you sort of get one half of this with Greek mythology, but it's not quite what I want.)
In any case, I keep seeking out these kinds of relationships in fiction, and very occasionally, I get what I want. I've also been fortunate enough to have a lot of people write fic for me about many of these pairings over the years!
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Date: 2021-01-16 05:59 pm (UTC)Dude, yes! I would eat that up!
I've also been fortunate enough to have a lot of people write fic for me about many of these pairings over the years!
That's wonderful!
Have you read Hambly's James Asher vampire series? The romance between the main vampire character and James and his wife Lydia (I very OT3 them) is not explicit, but I feel like it's so aware of the differences between them because of Simon's immortality. It never forgets that vampires would be deeply weird and other. (So many vampires these days are just regular people who happen to drink blood.)
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Date: 2021-01-17 03:09 pm (UTC)So many vampires these days are just regular people who happen to drink blood.
So true, and so frustrating!
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Date: 2021-01-17 08:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2021-01-15 09:28 pm (UTC)Your thoughts are super interesting, thank you. Do you have favourite examples?
Awwwww :(
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Date: 2021-01-16 03:56 pm (UTC)I listed a lot of my favourite examples above in my response to
My favourite of all is Warden and Paige from The Bone Season series, though!
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Date: 2021-01-21 09:25 pm (UTC)