“The two were together, so the two were the same...The girl, the King...and the monster they became.” Fan art of Elspeth and The Nightmare from “One Dark Window” by Rachel Gillig.
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“The two were together, so the two were the same...The girl, the King...and the monster they became.” Fan art of Elspeth and The Nightmare from “One Dark Window” by Rachel Gillig.
The girl, the King... and the monster they became.
Elspeth Spindle from One Dark Window by Rachel Gillig 🖤
Oathbreaker? No. Give me a character who cannot break their oath, no matter how much they may want to. The oath is a yoke they cannot take off. They are physically unable to do anything that would cause their oath to break. Their oath is a leash made of unbreakable chain and held in the hand of their patron. If it was chosen, it became too much to bear, and yet they were forced to bear it. If it was thrust upon them, there was no ability to say no. The oath as a cage. The oath as a curse.
We all do, buddy. We all do
You make soup in a big bowl. You serve it in a smaller bowl. And then you convey it, using a spoon, to your mouth. But what is the spoon? Simply a smaller bowl still
𝗔 𝗪𝗶𝗹𝗱 𝗟𝗮𝘀𝘁 𝗕𝗼𝘀𝘀 𝗔𝗽𝗽𝗲𝗮𝗿𝗲𝗱! 𝗧𝗩 𝗔𝗻𝗶𝗺𝗲 𝗡𝗲𝘄 𝗞𝗲𝘆 𝗩𝗶𝘀𝘂𝗮𝗹! 𝗔𝗶𝗿𝘀 𝗶𝗻 𝗢𝗰𝘁𝗼𝗯𝗲𝗿 𝟮𝟬𝟮𝟱!
Wayward Children moodboards cuz this was too long to be a reblog! And for the same reason, this isn’t everybody!
These are in introduction order cuz I felt like it. Some titles are made up, cuz I wanted to do titles and I don’t like inconsistency.
Are all the themes in “in other lands” supposed to be a commentary on something? Or do you just like writing sex scenes between minors, age gaps, and reverse misogyny?
Genuine question.
Ohhh, my dear anon, I don't believe this is a genuine question.
But it does bring up something I've been meaning to talk about. So I'll take the bait.
Firstly. Yes, my work contains a commentary on the world around us. I wonder what I could be doing with the child soldiers being sexually active in their teens (people hook up right after battles), and the age gap relationship ending in the younger one being too mature for the elder. What could I possibly have been attempting when I said 'how absurd gender roles are, when projected onto people we haven't been accustomed by our own society to see that way'? I wasn't being subtle, that's for sure.
Secondly. Yes I do enjoy writing! I think I should, it's my life's work. Am I titillated by my own writing, no - though I think it's fine to be. The sex scenes of In Other Lands aren't especially titillating, to be honest. It is interesting to me how often people sneer at women for writing romance and sex scenes, having 'book boyfriends,' insinuating women writers fancy their own characters. Women having too much immoral fun! Whereas men clearly write about sex for high literary purposes.
… I have to say from my experience of women and men's writing, I haven't found that to be true.
I’m not in this to have an internet argument. Mostly people use bad faith takes to poke at others from the other side of a screen for kicks. But I do know some truly internalise the attitude that writing certain things is wrong, that anyone who makes mistakes must be shunned as impure, and that is a deeply Victorian and restrictive attitude that guarantees unhappiness.
I've become increasingly troubled by the very binary and extreme ways of thinking I see arising on the internet. They come naturally from people being in echo chambers, becoming hostile to differing opinions, and the age-old conundrum of wanting to be good, fearing you aren't, and making the futile effort to be free of sin. It makes me think of Tennyson, who when travelling through Ireland at the time of the Great Famine, said nobody should talk about the 'Irish distress' to him and insisted the window shades of his carriage be shut as he went from castle to castle. So he wouldn't see the bodies. But that didn't make the bodies cease to be.
In Les Mis, Victor Hugo explores why someone might steal, what that means about them and their circumstances, and who they might be - and explores why someone else is made terribly unhappy, and endangers others, through their own too rigid adherence to judgement and condemnation without pity. The story understands both Jean Valjean the thief and Javert the policeman. Javert’s way of thinking is the one that inevitably leads to tragedy.
Depiction isn't endorsement. Depiction is discussion.
Many of my loved ones have had widely varying relationships to and experience of sex (including 'none'). They've felt all different types of ways about it. If writing about them is not permissible, I close them out. I'd much rather a dialogue be open than closed.
I do understand the urge to write what seems right to others. I've been brain-poisoned that way myself. I used to worry so much about my female characters doing the wrong things, because then they'd be justly hated! Then I noted which of my writer friends had people love their female characters the most - and it was the one who wrote their female characters as screwing up massively, making rash and sometimes wrong decisions. Who wrote them as people. Because that's what people do. That's what feels true to readers.
I want my characters to feel true to readers. I want my characters to react in messy ways to imperfect situations. I love fantasy, I love wild action and I love deep thought, and I want to engage. That's what In Other Lands is about. That's even more what Long Live Evil is about. That sexy lady who sashays in to have sexy sex with the hero - what is her deal? Someone who tricks and lies to others - why are they doing that, how did they get so skilled at it? What makes one person cruelly judgemental, and another ignore all boundaries? What makes Carmen Maria Machado describe ‘fictional queer villains’ as ‘by far the most interesting characters’? What irritates people about women having a great time? What attracts us to power, to fiction, and to transgression?
I don’t know the answers to all those questions, but I know I want to explore them. And I know one more thing.
If the moral thing to do is shut people out and shut people up? Count me among the villains.
THE FALL (2006) dir. Tarsem Singh (for @queenofattolia)
The Fall (2006)
I'm reading Greek and Roman Necromancy by Daniel Ogden and once again encountered the trope of oracular locations and temples keeping snakes for various ritual purposes and "feeding them" on a kind of honey cake, which as far as I know would not be interesting whatsoever to a snake and even if a snake ate a baked good it would probably have trouble digesting it (I assume). so I was mulling this over, and naturally Ogden doesn't address it, I've actually never read any writer on these subjects address the animal husbandry involved with ancient rituals, which is always frustrating , and it occurred to me that snakes wouldn't eat a Twinkie but rodents and insects absolutely would.
if your ritual snakes are just being kept in some sort of enclosure, especially something like a pit or a katabasis (the Greeks were really big on a Amigara Fault-type procedure where people would go into holes in the earth in various ways and then come out of the holes in various ways and during this process be understood to have visited the underworld or received a vision from an oracular ghost such as Trophonius, the mechanical details of the process aren't clear), you probably aren't directly observing them very often except for any part of the rituals that involve handling, during which the snakes wouldn't be eating anyway. but alone in their enclosures with a bunch of bakery snacks, the rodents and bugs could sneak out of hiding and get grabbed by the snakes.
also I imagine a lot of the smoke and mirrors of the staff at these temples involved managing the various sacred animals somewhat like a petting zoo or a feeder goldfish tank at PetSmart, and just disappearing any of them that died so the clients wouldn't see them. it's likely the staff were cleaning, feeding, and taking care of the snakes at various locations and the dogs at the Asclepias temple and so on.
one has to imagine that most temple priesthood were probably just people who had gotten that particular job somehow, and not the ecstatic true believers that are depicted in every classicist romantic painting and most mythological or fictional imaginings of such places. of course there are tons of modern fiction books that imagine the same thing I do, I read The Jaguar Princess by Clare Bell when I was about 13 and loved the plain and practical descriptions of Aztec temple life, the process of creating art, and the anatomical approach to the idea of a were-jaguar (i have no idea if this book stands up, probably not), I think it permanently contextualized my thinking about ancient ritual as practical and pedestrian for the people who worked in that field. it's fun to imagine the blood-soaked ancient temples in any part of the history of humanity being as ho-hum as an Anglican church service, but they probably were for most people.
If you liked Tortall, then...
Thought it might be fun to come up with a rec list that corresponded with elements of Tammy's books (sometimes extremely tenuously). Tortall is up first! All titles link to the Storygraph page for the book, for a synopsis and any warnings.
Song of the Lioness:
A girl impersonates her brother and lives as a boy (She Who Became the Sun)
A gender non-conforming fighter (What Moves the Dead)
A knight and a quest (Godkiller)
Warriors and mages serve the crown (Mystic and Rider)
The Immortals:
Sorceress lives amongst animals (The Forgotten Beasts of Eld)
Horse girl (The Bear and the Nightingale)
Revenge served hot (Iron Widow)
Here be dragons (The Priory of the Orange Tree)
Protector of the Small:
A fight for the right to knight-training (The Story of Silence)
Studies and buddies... and prejudices (Legendborn)
Japanese-inspired elements (Shadow of the Fox)
Lady Knight (Gwen & Art Are Not In Love)
Tricksters:
Crows (Black Sun)
The brink of rebellion (The Unbroken)
Provost's Dog:
A gang of rogues (Six of Crows)
A loveable thief and an upholder of the law (Little Thieves)
A cheeky cat makes his opinions known (The Aeronaut's Windlass)
Tempests & Slaughter:
How to train your mage (A Deadly Education)
♡₊˚ 🦢・₊✧
“Sometimes when I'm in a bookstore or library, I am overwhelmed by all the things that I do not know. Then I am seized by a powerful desire to read all the books, one by one.”
― Arthur C Clarke
“Of all the weapons in the world, love is the most dangerous.”
— Seth Grahame-Smith
when they said god is a woman this is what they meant actually
Thanks for the tag, @smalltownfae!
Rules: List ten books that have stayed with you in some way, don’t take but a few minutes, and don’t think too hard - they don’t have to be the “right” or “great” works, just the ones that have touched you.
1 - Realm of the Elderlings by Robin Hobb: I've been obsessed with this book series for over 3 years now...
2 - Die unendliche Geschichte by Michael Ende: this book was very meaningful to me as a child and has influenced my tastes in reading and writing so much. I recently reread it and it even mostly held up!
3 - Обломов by И. А. Гончаров: that meme about being transported in a different universe and seeing the worst possible version of yourself? This book is that to me.
4 - The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson: this was my first Jackson book and boy, what a high note to start out with! I love hauntings and toxic complicated vaguely homoerotic relationships between women and messy family dynamics. This book didn't just feel tailor-made for me, but I also feel like it's influenced my writing and reading in a way that hasn't quite started to show yet.
5 - The Forgotten Beasts of Eld by Patricia A. McKillip: I am obsessed with the themes of memory and mind manipulation, agency and consent, love and revenge in this book!
6 - Xenogenesis by Octavia Butler: Andy, when you first talked about it, I looked up the summary and said "yeah, I'm not reading that". I'm so glad I changed my mind! It ended up being thee most complex book I've ever read about the complex interplay between free will and biological determinism. I have complicated views on how Butler wrote the survival and gender themes in this book, but it's definitely a classic for a reason and I've been tempted to reread it.
7 - Miracle Creek by Angie Kim: I accidentally ran across this book in a city library and it was the most intensely uncomfortable read of my life. It kept me just on the edge of DNFing, but I'm glad I finished it. It's a murder mystery & courtroom thriller that's all about complicated relationships between parents and children, especially with immigrant families and autistic children. It's also, for better or worse, written very much from the perspective of the parents. I have complicated feelings about the ending and the ethical questions presented in this book overall, but it's definitely stayed with me for good.
8 - Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism by Robert Lifton: this was one of the first books I've read when I started taking an interest in cult dynamics and parts of it have really stayed with me.
9 - Craft Sequence by Max Gladstone: anyone who's been in my vicinity during my livereads knows my deep & intense feelings about these books and especially Kai Pohala, corporate priestess and protagonist of two books of this series. It's still very near the bottom because I'm prone to jumping from obsession to obsession and I'm not sure this one is here to stay.
10 - Чёрный альбатрос by Тамара Крюкова: I first read this book at a very impressionable age and some of its themes really influenced my taste in fiction. I reread it a few years ago and it still held up! The antagonist has a similar appeal to Kennit from RotE to me, but he's both flatter and funnier than he is (he basically commits identity theft of another character and travels along with the MCs, who remain oblivious to the fact that he's trying to murder them and instead the things he does occasionally end up helping them instead)xD
Tagging: @gwenllian-in-the-abbey, @lethotep, @licilou22, @terpia, @theatredelabsurde, @persialester, @yevrosima-the-third, @longagoitwastuesday, @okay-sha, @alosyair