The view from Beacon Hill.
County of Somerset, UK.
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@pythionice
The view from Beacon Hill.
County of Somerset, UK.
love is stored in the found family trope
âI love you. I will love you till the stars crumble, which is a less idle threat than is usual to lovers on parting.âÂ
â Robin McKinley, The Hero and the Crown // Damar
Forgotten Childhood Books -> 6/??
In friendship, nothing is made up, nothing is pretended. Whatever there is, it is genuine and exists of its own accord.
Cicero, De Amicitia
A BABYđ
actually I love how catullusâ romantic poems creep into friendship language and friendship poems creep into romantic language, and he writes different types of loves as all bleeding into each other
There are the holes in my voice where my heart appears, the ways you pronounce my name until it becomes nakedâ the two of us laying down one loneliness after another until we reach love.
Willy Clay, In Our Museum
a 2021 book meme
@verecunda kindly tagged me in the following meme (thanks dear! <3):
1. Best book you have read in 2021 so far? It has to be Dominion by Tom Holland; itâs about how Latin Christianity and the West have shaped each other over two thousand years, to the point where our values and our understanding are inescapably Christian at the root, no matter how secular you are.
I donât think any work of Tom Hollandâs will ever top Rubicon (that bookâs verve! its pizzazz! how much it taught me! I owe it such a debt); but I have to bow down to the sheer amount of research involved in condensing over 2,000 years of Western history into 600 pages, and to how revelatory and transformative an argument it is. Once youâve heard it, youâll see it everywhere, not least in how strange, fascinating and terrible the classical world now seems to us, following such a radical shift in morals.
2. Best sequel you have read in 2021 so far? Iâve only read two sequels in 2021 so far! Â I am as ever astonishingly bad at continuing series.Â
The best is Lustrum, where all I can say is thank you Robert Harris for my life. Â I knew late Roman republican politics was wild, but Iâd forgotten it was this gloriously entertaining. Â Harris is clearly such a political and parliamentary geek; someone who delights in the theatricality of public life, the alliances and compromises that lie behind it, and the shifts in power and influence expressed and created by debates and legislation.
But more than that, the book is so good because the people in it feel so real. I love his Lucullus (disdainful, feline, magnificent, Iâm), love his hot bullheaded Metellus Celer to absolute bits, and I even really like Harrisâs Catilina, for his charisma and ruined nobilityâhe feels like a tragic figure, someone who should have been using his qualities in service of the state, not trying to destroy it.
The most tragic figure in it, though, is Cicero, whose moment of glory is also the seed of his destruction. (and it never occurred to me before that his harping on about having saved the Republic might be in part displaced guilt over ordering executions without trial.) Â Tiroâs portrait of him is clearly rooted in long-standing familiarity and tender affection, the sort of love which embraces the whole of the other person, flaws and weaknesses included, and reading it you get the same sense as you do in the letters, of how much Cicero depended on those close to him for support. Â but more than that, you also get a sense of the kind of person Tiro must have been, to serve Cicero so well - intelligent and observant and sensitive and devoted.
I could wish for a little more depth in the portrayal of the female characters - though it shows the extent of the misogyny they had to fight against - but otherwise this book is an absolute riot. I canât wait to get on to the next one and yet I canât bear the thought of Cicero dying. (his going into exile nearly made me cry.)
3. A new release you want to check out? Elodie Harperâs The Wolf Den, a story about the lives of slaves in a brothel in Pompeii. Iâve seen a lupanar in documentaries about Pompeii before, and even through a TV screen and across 2,000 years you can feel the misery and despair. So a character-driven novel which looks unflinchingly at the slavesâ experiences, and also focuses on the ways they find to survive, the friendship and sisterhood between them, sounds like a tough read but a really interesting and worthwhile one.
4. Most anticipated book release of the second half of the year? A lot of the books I was looking forward to this year have already come out, so Iâm going to go for Jessie Burtonâs Medusa, just because I can never get enough of myth retellings.
5. Biggest surprise? Natalie Haynes is a TREASURE. I went to an online talk about her book Pandoraâs Jar, and I wasnât expecting her to be so funny nor to have so much fangirlish enthusiasm when talking about Greek myths; think of the best Tumblr classics posts youâve seen, with their mix of erudition and articulacy and affectionate teasing, and it was just like that. I really really recommend her podcast, Natalie Haynes Stands Up For The Classics; Iâve listened to a few episodes and itâs such a gem.
Pandoraâs Jar itself is a bit more serious, but also something I would definitely recommend to people on here; itâs about how our common perceptions of Greek myths often marginalise or demean or vilify the women in them, and looks at ancient variants and modern retellings to consider alternative perspectives, ones with more sympathy for the women involved and why they do what they do.Â
6. Biggest disappointment? Nghi Voâs The Empress of Salt and Fortune; it was pitched to me as a sharp, incisive novella about historiography and the exercise of female power. Â But its plotting made no sense, and I didnât know enough about the characters or their world to care about or support the revolution being incitedâswapping one ruler for another makes no difference to me when I havenât been told much about either. Â It wasnât rich and complex, it was shallow and unthinking.
7. Favourite new author (either new to you or debut)? Melissa Scott. A Choice of Destinies is all about what might have happened if Alexander had turned west after conquering Persia, and headed for Rome instead. (she thinks the Romans would have been folded into Alexanderâs empire, and I have to say the same, sorry Livy!)  What I love about this book is its wealth of immersive detail, and its characters: firstly the Companions (in particular its steady, intelligent Ptolemy, and its sardonic, amused, sandy-haired, lounging Perdiccasâa different characterisation than Iâve seen elsewhere, however I have one (1) favourite Companion and itâs always this guy), but also its Alexander and Hephaistion, and the ever-present, unspoken trust and support and care and affection running between them.  The book never makes a big thing of it, but itâs clear how much they love each other.
Thereâs not much plot per se; instead itâs the kind of book which lets you escape into another world for a while. Â The quietly sad thing about it is not only that it didnât happen but that it wouldnât have happened; the choice the real Alexander made was the one that was truest to himself, no matter how tragically it ended.
8. Favourite new fictional crush? Edmund Ruthven from Strange Practiceâa cultured, refined vampire with matinĂ©e idol good looks, a commanding presence and a tendency towards ennui.  But beyond these typical vampire tropes, heâs also a connoisseur of modern technology as much as silk dressing gowns, someone with a passion for learning, and a serious, thoughtful and caring person who staves off said ennui by acting as guardian and protector in the monster community.
9. Newest favourite character? Red from This Is How You Lose The Time War; it was love from âand our glorious crystal future is looking so bright I gotta wear shades, as the prophets sayâ. Â I adore her terrible jokes and her boyish sense of mischief.
10. A book that made you happy? Vivian Shawâs Strange Practice, an urban fantasy novel about Greta Helsing, who runs a Harley Street clinic where she takes care of Londonâs monsters, e.g. a mummy who needs a replacement bone in his foot or a ghoul chieftain with depression, and who solves mysterious murders with her vampire/vampyre (theyâre different things!) friends.
I expected a light bit of fun; but I wasnât expecting it to feel so comforting, or to vibe so deeply with its interior landscapeâits wry humour and tea and rain and trips to the British Museum and references to Gothic literature. Itâs a steadily kind and nurturing book, with a commitment to found family and to finding humanity in unlikely places, and I canât wait to read the others in the series.
11. A book that made you cry? Nadia Bolz-Weberâs Accidental Saints; she used to be the pastor at House for All Sinners and Saints in Denver, and these are her communityâs stories (and some of her own), loosely structured around the liturgical calendar.Â
Reading it I did feel that there was no way I would ever be cool enough for her, but her catechism places a huge emphasis on redemption and unconditional love and the idea that everyone we see is a child of God, that we are all messy, imperfect sinners who can only keep trying, and all these things are deeply moving to me. (the chapter on the Beatitudes is worth it alone; she, more than other teachers Iâve seen, really really gets it.)
12. Most beautiful book you have bought or received this year? The Puffin reissue of Susan Cooperâs Over Sea Under Stone â the cover artwork is gorgeous and slightly woodcut-esque, and exactly the right blend of folkloric and timeless for this series. (also, I flipped through and stumbled across the lines about how Barney had been longing to go to the West Country, because as someone who loved King Arthur, it would feel strangely like coming home. beginning to see now why so many people have recommended these books to me!)
Rachel Hickmanâs One Silver Summer also has a very pretty cover - its dreamy romanticism feels just right for a story about horses and Cornwall and first love.
13. What book do you need to read by the end of the year? Apart from maybe finishing Robert Harrisâs Cicero novels, Iâd like to read AJ Pollardâs biography of Warwick - heâs one of my favourite historical figures, and it seems a shame to leave an entire book about him just sitting on my shelf!
14. What book do you need to re-read by the end of the year? Iâd like to have another go at the Silmarillion; itâs been a really long time since Iâve read it (longer still since I read it completelyâthe last time I tried, I got bogged down in the long march to Valinor) and everything after FĂ«anorâs rebellion is incredibly hazy.
tagging: @peripatetia, @somewheremeantforme, @thiswaitingheart, @lady-plantagenet, @rottenappleheart, @ghost-minuet, @harry-leroy, @prettiewittie, @nuingiliath and @eunyisadoran. But if youâd like to do this, please consider yourself tagged!
đșsend this to ten bloggers you think are wonderful. keep the game goingđș
thank you so much for the lovely message, itâs really kind of you. <3 and the same very much applies to you too, my dear!
bless David Mitchell for his commitment to autistic representationâfor Jasper de Zoet, whoâs low empathy and struggles to read faces and understand social cues, and who doesnât always like eye contact or being touched; and who is also a virtuoso guitarist, good at cricket, intelligent, sincere and as nuanced and complex as anyone else in the book
I havenât drawn my OTP in forever! But itâs the time of Love, so here they are. <3 <3
Sing, Muse, he said, and I have sung.
Natalie Haynes, A Thousand Ships
East Lothian, South East of ScotlandÂ
Medea at the beginning of the play: my life sucks
Medea at the end of the play: haha your life sucks