idiosyncreant (
idiosyncreant) wrote2008-04-29 04:25 pm
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"Seditious grandmothers enabling Rogues...what's up with that?"
Draft of Seditious Intent done! Though it's a really crappy one, I've decided that's okay. I've got Story, we're good for the moment.
Two books I think everyone who ever drops through here should read:
The Face in the Frost (John Bellairs)
one line press? I just finished reading this and am now insanely eager to OWN a copy. Munnies must come first, munnies must come first...
Women Who Run With the Wolves (Clarissa Pinkola Estes)
a book about love, life, and stories from all over that teach us (especially women) about it.
I'll add reasons here once I'm done reading the chillens more Skulduggery Pleasant.
ETA~ I's back! So, without any further ado,
Two books I think everyone who ever drops through here should read:
The Face in the Frost (John Bellairs)
one line press? I just finished reading this and am now insanely eager to OWN a copy. Munnies must come first, munnies must come first...
Women Who Run With the Wolves (Clarissa Pinkola Estes)
a book about love, life, and stories from all over that teach us (especially women) about it.
I'll add reasons here once I'm done reading the chillens more Skulduggery Pleasant.
ETA~ I's back! So, without any further ado,
The Face in the Frost was recommended to me and the ViableParadiseXI group more than once. When my pet librarian (NoDisrespectedIntended) had it in her smorgasbord (NDI) of YA-interest fantasy/SF, I knew I should pick it up. Then I read the first page.
Hooked.
It took me a while to pick it up once I had it home, because something else took precedence and I forgot why it snagged me so neatly.
But it's got the very homey/real-life sort of humor in it's main characters juxtaposed with terribly drastic magic and some gothic wonders of event. It's like the Hobbit in humor and juxtaposition like that--and the zany wizard hero reminds me of Harry Potter 'verse, only more grounded in reality.
I hope Amazon has a preview of it, and I hope you read it, too.
Women Who Run With the Wolves is a work by a psychologist who seems to truly love folk-tales. Each chapter dissects the wisdom (Woman Wisdom, particularly) of stories from a wide array of cultures and how it applies to being a whole person and healing from hurt. It also speaks to men, because so much of this is tied up in the life-partner relationship and the ways families interact.
I'm quite a few chapters in and each seems to bring to light a new truth.
I also love the abstract approach, the focus on the elements of the story being the truth-carriers. Even when initially the ideas really weird me out.
I can deal with being weirded out--sometimes that's the only way to learn something new, something you need to know.
Hooked.
It took me a while to pick it up once I had it home, because something else took precedence and I forgot why it snagged me so neatly.
But it's got the very homey/real-life sort of humor in it's main characters juxtaposed with terribly drastic magic and some gothic wonders of event. It's like the Hobbit in humor and juxtaposition like that--and the zany wizard hero reminds me of Harry Potter 'verse, only more grounded in reality.
I hope Amazon has a preview of it, and I hope you read it, too.
Women Who Run With the Wolves is a work by a psychologist who seems to truly love folk-tales. Each chapter dissects the wisdom (Woman Wisdom, particularly) of stories from a wide array of cultures and how it applies to being a whole person and healing from hurt. It also speaks to men, because so much of this is tied up in the life-partner relationship and the ways families interact.
I'm quite a few chapters in and each seems to bring to light a new truth.
I also love the abstract approach, the focus on the elements of the story being the truth-carriers. Even when initially the ideas really weird me out.
I can deal with being weirded out--sometimes that's the only way to learn something new, something you need to know.