nebroadwe: (Books)
The Magdalen Reading ([personal profile] nebroadwe) wrote2010-03-23 03:31 pm

Books: That's all, folks.

It's a bad month when I dump not one, but two books within the first chapter for annoying me. First out of the queue was Perpetua of Carthage: Portrait of a Third-Century Martyr by William Farina. I did hesitate when I read his bio and discovered he was the president of "a national real estate consulting firm" who'd previously written about Shakespeare and the American Civil War. Then I told myself not to be a snob: independent scholars exist. Unfortunately, Farina's idea of contextualizing Perpetua was to compare her to C.S. Lewis because they were both converts -- never mind the enormous temporal, geopolitical, sociological and even religious gaps between the two. No, thanks; I like my history historical.

Then I tried Larissa Taylor's Virgin Warrior: The Life and Death of Joan of Arc. Here I hesitated on general principles: it's really hard to write a biography of Joan that prescinds (wonderful word; thank you, John P. Meier!) from faith claims about her while dealing seriously with her self-presentation as someone called by God. (Do Florence Nightingale biographies have this problem? Must investigate ...) Still, I was willing to give Taylor a shot. She did have some interesting things to say initially on the subject of Joan's responses to hostile questioning about her voices and the possibility that such questioning had Joan both discovering new contexts for her experiences and/or responding sarcastically and enigmatically about them to an audience that had already made up its mind about her. On the other hand, Taylor seemed a little too eager to naturalize any hint of the supernatural in Joan's career, to reduce Joan's motivations to having her own will. That's fine, but "her own will" was presented by Joan and received by those with whom she came in contact in ways determined by their apprehension of the supernatural. The historian need not believe what they believed, but she should do a better job of analyzing and representing it than Taylor seemed willing (heh) to do. I gave up when she claimed that Joan left Domremy on her quest because her parents were too controlling (they tried to arrange a marriage for her and she demurred -- without any of the usual accompanying saintly Sturm und Drang, either) and she wanted to live out a prophecy. Good-bye.

I'm going to read some nice, purely political biographies now -- Thomas Wolsey and Thomas Cromwell. Argh.
ext_110433: The Magdalen Reading (Books)

[identity profile] nebroadwe.livejournal.com 2010-03-24 12:21 am (UTC)(link)
I enjoyed the whole Percy Jackson series: light-hearted, quick-worded, and soon over, as Treebeard once remarked. :-) Too bad the movie was so clunky. Riordan's supposed to be taking on Egyptian mythology next; I'll definitely be giving that one a try.

[identity profile] cornerofmadness.livejournal.com 2010-03-24 01:49 am (UTC)(link)
this is the first for me (evil little dog mention you liked the series when i saw the movie trailer and said 'that looks bad)

how many books are there?

[identity profile] artemisrae.livejournal.com 2010-03-24 03:23 am (UTC)(link)
Swooping in on account of passionate feelings! There are five books, and I totally stayed up til like 3 am on a Friday night and read the fifth book in one sitting, because I had to know what happened. The first book is actually not my favorite, the series really picked up during the second one for me.
ext_110433: The Magdalen Reading (Books)

[identity profile] nebroadwe.livejournal.com 2010-03-24 12:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I think Riordan got successively better hold of his characterization with each volume up to no. 3, where he found his comfort level and plateaued. I'd have loved no. 5 to push deeper into the whole your-strength-is-your-weakness thing, but these are Thrilling Adventures first. Besides, Riordan managed to pull in a whole raft of Trojan war tropes without whacking the reader over the head with them ("Lookit, lookit -- Trojan war tropes!") and I enjoy plotting subtleties as much as character ones. So I own no. 5 in hardback anyway. :-)

[identity profile] artemisrae.livejournal.com 2010-03-25 03:08 am (UTC)(link)
I'd have loved no. 5 to push deeper into the whole your-strength-is-your-weakness thing

But if he'd done that, how could I fic it?

I don't have the rest of high school and college plotted out, nosireee...
ext_110433: The Magdalen Reading (Writer)

[identity profile] nebroadwe.livejournal.com 2010-03-27 12:26 am (UTC)(link)
Heh. I know what he does for a living as an adult, and what happens when he and [spoiler] have their first child. (Hint: nothing good. Remember who she peeved off in BOTL?)

[identity profile] cornerofmadness.livejournal.com 2010-03-24 02:21 pm (UTC)(link)
I stayed up later than my sick body should have to to do the same with the first book in the series. Guess I'll be at the library soon looking for the rest. Thanks. Already told my cousins and friends with kids in the actual intended age range to go pick it up
ext_110433: The Magdalen Reading (Books)

[identity profile] nebroadwe.livejournal.com 2010-03-27 12:27 am (UTC)(link)
Conversely, my local goddaughter and her sister are really good with recommendations for an 11- and 9-year-old. They hooked me on both Avatar: The Last Airbender and Percy Jackson. :-)

[identity profile] cornerofmadness.livejournal.com 2010-03-27 12:47 am (UTC)(link)
hahahaha, i should ask my friend's son and my little cousin for recommendations