anotheranon: (books)
[personal profile] anotheranon
Ever since I got back from Seattle, I've been like a magpie in my attraction to bright colors: vivid and so saturated that if you put it in the washer it will turn your socks [insert color here]. I fed it a bit this week by playing with peacock blue sari fabric but what's satisfying it now is my long-backordered copy of Moda a Firenze 1540-1580. I don't know whether it's the lush artwork within or imagining the original red of Eleanora of Toledo's surviving burial dress, but ... I want to make something with that kind of intense color. I keep flipping back to a blue green dress with gold sleeves (a color combo I've never seen described in Northern Europe for the same time period).....

Am also reading the first Pern book. I want desperately to like this book - it's been recommended to me by many and after whinging about the lack of Strong Female Characters in my fiction stack it's fair to argue that Lessa fits the SFC bill, but....maybe I'm just being too cynical, but the psychic link with dragons (dragons!) just reeks of new-age-huggy-cuddly fantasy cliches (dragons!) to me. Should I stick with it or not?

And it's amazing the things one learns on Teh Interwebs: cat hair does, indeed, felt. I've been threatening to take all of Spice's shedding and knit a "Spice sweater" for Kisia, but beads dyed with Kool Aid sound so much easier (because I can't knit) :P

Date: 2007-05-02 10:35 pm (UTC)
geekchick: (reading)
From: [personal profile] geekchick
Am also reading the first Pern book.

If I'd known you were interested in reading it, I'd have given you one of my copies; I got two some years ago when the publisher was giving away free copies along with books by then-new authors, and I just ditched the last copy recently on Paperbackswap. I really liked the Pern series a few decades ago when I read them, but they weren't anything I ever felt the need to re-read.

but the psychic link with dragons (dragons!) just reeks of new-age-huggy-cuddly fantasy cliches (dragons!) to me. Should I stick with it or not?

I think that if the "psychic link with dragons" thing irks you, then the Pern books are probably not for you. =)

Date: 2007-05-02 10:37 pm (UTC)
geekchick: (Default)
From: [personal profile] geekchick
Also? Much lust for that Moda a Firenze book.

Date: 2007-05-02 10:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anotheranon.livejournal.com
I invite you to come visit the book. It is scrumpdillyicious!

Date: 2007-05-02 10:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anotheranon.livejournal.com
It's not so much that the psychic dragons think "irks" me as much as it smacks of every fantasy stereotype that has put me off reading any book that has a dragon anywhere in it.

I didn't realize the Pern series was written back in the 1960s; was McCaffrey was the first author to write extensive fantasy with dragons?

Date: 2007-05-02 11:10 pm (UTC)
geekchick: (reading)
From: [personal profile] geekchick
It's not so much that the psychic dragons think "irks" me

Gotcha. Perhaps poor word choice on my part.

as much as it smacks of every fantasy stereotype that has put me off reading any book that has a dragon anywhere in it.

Have you read any of Naomi Novik's Temeraire series yet? Yes, dragons, but the premise is a "reimagining of the epic events of the Napoleonic Wars with an air force—an air force of dragons, manned by crews of aviators".

was McCaffrey was the first author to write extensive fantasy with dragons?

I must confess that I don't actually know. I think that at the time I read the series, the dragons were what drew me to it (I was 12, maybe?), but I think my later feelings on the books are somewhat similar to [livejournal.com profile] ragdoll's. I wasn't feeling particularly sad to part with my copies of any of the books.

I don't remember offhand if you'd linked to this or not, but you might find something interesting at http://feministsf.org/bibs/recommended.html. If you haven't read Sheri Tepper's "The Gate to Women's Country" yet, that one can be excellent conversation-fodder.

Date: 2007-05-03 03:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jlsjlsjls.livejournal.com
I'd say McCaffrey was likely the pioneer with non-fairy-tale dragons in a fairly-well-thought-out social setting, and like all pioneers, she had to feel her way cautiously and slowly ... as in all series, later books move faster because it can be safely assumed that a reader knows the background. There are some impressive societal twists and discoveries in the books (remember, the Pern series are science fiction, not fantasy, despite surface appearances, and McCaffrey does use that well). I'd say try to stick with this first book to the end (ideally, I'd say read the first three, which formed a fairly complete trilogy). Or switch to McCaffrey's Harper Hall books instead (also set on Pern, but from a non-dragonrider POV ... when it comes to strong female characters, I'd rank that series' Menolly ahead of Lessa).

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