Books!


Books read: 43, 26 by women and 17 by men; 42 novels; 2 rereads
Best five, not in any particular order: Seraphina; Code Name Verity; Codex; Advent; The Element -inth in Greek

Edit to add: whilst on my reading-holiday in December, I noted that nearly every book I was reading, or had read recently, involved a violent / sudden death, sometimes accidental, usually of a woman or child. And the trend continues this year. Thoughts? (I mean, yes, I can retire to Austen / Heyer / etc, though some of those do feature deaths: but is this such a prevalent trope that it's transparent?)

See 'em all here: Dreamwidth | LiveJournal
books2013 by tamaranth
books2013, a photo by tamaranth on Flickr.



Courses!


9 courses, ranging from Mathematical Thinking through Paleobiology to Beethoven Sonatas.
in detail )
Bacchae -- Euripides

Kadmos: Is your soul still quivering?
Agave: I don't understand your words. I have become somehow
sobered, changing from my former state of mind.
Kadmos: Can you hear and respond clearly?
Agave: Yes, for I forget what we said before, father.
Kadmos: To whose house did you come in marriage?
Agave: You gave me, as they say, to Echion, the sown man.
Kadmos: What son did you bear to your husband in the house?
Agave: Pentheus, from my union with his father.
Kadmos: Whose head do you hold in your hands? [lines 1268-1275]

Read, along with several other tragedies (Oedipus Rex, Oresteia, etc), for the Coursera Greek and Roman Mythology course. I've seen a couple of productions of Bacchae, but wasn't familiar with the text.
spoilers? really? )
The Odyssey -- Homer, translated by Robert Fagles

And the ship like a four-horse team careering down the plain,
all breaking as one with the whiplash cracking smartly,
leaping with hoofs high to run the course in no time —
so the stern hove high and plunged with the seething rollers
crashing dark in her wake as on she surged unwavering [Book XIII, lines 93-7]

spoilery, I suppose :) )
The Left Hand of Darkness -- Ursula Le Guin
I stopped at a street-crossing and thought, Why should I not go east, across the mountains and the plains back to Kerm Land, a poor man afoot, and so come home to Estre where I was born, the stone house on a bitter mountainside: why not go home? Three times or four I stopped and looked back ... each time I thought of the folly of trying to go home. As well kill myself. I was born to live in exile, it appeared, and my one way home was by way of dying. [p. 59]


Reread for the Coursera Fantasy and SF course (a previous review is here). I couldn't believe I no longer had a copy: promptly fixed that problem, thanks to Amazon.review packed with spoilers )
The Martian Chronicles -- Ray Bradbury
The rain.
Raw, gentle, and easy, it mizzled out of the high air, a special elixir, tasting of spells and stars and air, carrying a peppery dust in it, and moving like a rare light sherry on his tongue.
Rain.
He sat up. He let the blanket fall and his blue denim shirt spot, while the rain took on more solid drops. The fire looked as though an invisible animal were dancing on it, crushing it, until it was angry smoke. The rain fell. The great black lid of sky cracked in six powdery blue chips, like a marvelous crackled glaze, and rushed down. He saw ten billion rain crystals, hesitating long enough to be photographed by the electrical display. Then darkness and water. (p. 76)

non-spoilery review )
Herland -- Charlotte Perkins Gilman
“But they look — why, this is a CIVILIZED country!” I protested. “There must be men.” (p.11)

Read for the Coursera fantasy and SF course.
marginally spoilery review )
A Princess of Mars -- Edgar Rice Burroughs
I closed my eyes, stretched out my arms toward the god of my vocation and felt myself drawn with the suddenness of thought through the trackless immensity of space.

Read for the Coursera fantasy and SF course.
marginally spoilery review )
The Island of Doctor Moreau -- H G Wells
Before, they had been beasts, their instincts fitly adapted to their surroundings, and happy as living things may be. Now they stumbled in the shackles of humanity, lived in a fear that never died, fretted by a law they could not understand; their mock-human existence, begun in an agony, was one long internal struggle, one long dread of Moreau — and for what?

Read for the Coursera fantasy and SF course. I first read this novel as a teenager and found it depressing and unpleasant. This response hasn't changed. I dislike the characters; am distressed by Moreau's experiments; and I read between the lines.spoilery review )
The Invisible Man -- H G Wells

"...giving drugs to a cat is no joke, Kemp! And the process failed [...] These were the claws and the pigment stuff, what is it? — at the back of the eye in a cat. You know?"
"Tapetum."
"Yes, the tapetum. It didn’t go. [...]gave the beast opium, and put her and the pillow she was sleeping on, on the apparatus. And after all the rest had faded and vanished, there remained two little ghosts of her eyes." [chapter 20]

Read, like several other recent rereads, for the Coursera fantasy and SF course.slightly spoilery review )
Frankenstein -- Mary Shelley
Were we among the tamer scenes of nature I might fear to encounter your unbelief, perhaps your ridicule; but many things will appear possible in these wild and mysterious regions which would provoke the laughter of those unacquainted with the ever-varied powers of nature...

spoilery review )
Dracula -- Bram Stoker
... he is not free. Nay, he is even more prisoner than the slave of the galley, than the madman in his cell. He cannot go where he lists, he who is not of nature has yet to obey some of nature’s laws ... [Chapter 18]


Read for the Coursera Fantasy and SF course (week 3). spoilery review )
The Annotated Alice -- Lewis Carroll, ed. Martin Gardner
'This is a child!' Haigha replied eagerly, coming in front of Alice to introduce her, and spreading out both his hands towards her in an Anglo-Saxon attitude. 'We only found it to-day. It's as large as life, and twice as natural!'

'I always thought they were fabulous monsters!' said the Unicorn. 'Is it alive?'

'It can talk,' said Haigha, solemnly. [Through the Looking Glass, Chapter 7]

non-spoilery review )
Household Stories -- Brothers Grimm
"Shall we suffer death because of a girl! we swear to be revenged; wherever we find a girl we will shed her blood." ['The Twelve Brothers']

non-spoilery review )

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