fantasy novels.

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I’ve been too depressed to list for several months now but somehow this thread has coaxed words out of me

realistic pillow (Jon not Jon), Saturday, 21 September 2024 15:23 (two months ago) link

*post, not list

realistic pillow (Jon not Jon), Saturday, 21 September 2024 15:23 (two months ago) link

nice to see you here!

scott seward, Saturday, 21 September 2024 15:25 (two months ago) link

like the olden tymes of yore.

scott seward, Saturday, 21 September 2024 15:25 (two months ago) link

Hi Scott <3

realistic pillow (Jon not Jon), Saturday, 21 September 2024 15:27 (two months ago) link

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duncton_Wood

imagine tryin to convince someone how much these books will wreck you

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Saturday, 21 September 2024 21:56 (two months ago) link

they out of print? trying to find new copies don't see any...

scott seward, Saturday, 21 September 2024 22:34 (two months ago) link

Following ilx discussion of Alan Garner a while back, I just now finished reading The Owl Service for the second time in the past week, which never happens---second time was much quicker, though mainly because the whole thing was still lodged, incl. what I couldn't quite remember or forget, to near-quote one character on another, sympathetically and not: that's just how it is these days, in the book and out, to some extent---but mainly, I knew and kinda knew, with a squint sometimes, what had happened, was happening still, is happening still, anywhere and anytime I open the book, the real and modern and fantasy and ancient, recurring and mixing---I found that I did understand it/take it in (incl. class and English and Welsh and gender and generational and generative and other identity markers, clashes, proximities) a bit better for having read it the first time, also recognizing again and moreso the questions that will never be answered: my struggles somewhat mirroring/aping those of the characters, although they have it worse, or most of them do.
Enjoyed the author's afterword as well (btw, he mentions the TV adaptation, filmed in the valley of his inspiration---any of you watched it?), reminding me of enjoying Lethem's afterword to We Have Always Lived In The Castle, another rec if you want to take it as fantasy, personal mythology.

dow, Friday, 4 October 2024 01:52 (two months ago) link

TV version seemed underwhelming to me, they didn't capture the atmosphere of the book very well and the casting was odd.

There's also this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elidor#Television_adaptation
And this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Shift_(novel)#Television_adaptation_and_popular_culture

neither of which I've seen. Elidor quite infamous in the UK for scaring the shit out of any kids that did see it though, in true British style.

Plus these, although The Moon of Gomrath doesn't seem to have been adapted at all: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Weirdstone_of_Brisingamen#Adaptations

RIO Speedwagon (Matt #2), Friday, 4 October 2024 12:12 (two months ago) link

is the owl service the one that takes a lot from the Mabinogion? that keeps cropping up here and there to the point where i feel i should read it.

koogs, Friday, 4 October 2024 12:19 (two months ago) link

(yes - The Owl Service interprets a story from the Welsh Mabinogion, namely, portions of the story of "Math Son of Mathonwy.")

koogs, Friday, 4 October 2024 12:20 (two months ago) link

strangely, published in the US as "Maths son of Mathsonwy"

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Friday, 4 October 2024 14:29 (two months ago) link

Blurb for this edition:

In his earlier novels, The Weirdstone of Brisingstone, The Moon of Gomroth and Elidor, Garner used the sucesssful formula of the spilling of the twilight world of ancient legend into the present day. Here he uses the formula again, with an added depth, and even more compulsive terror-haunted beauty.

What other Garner should I read? All of it? Think there was favorable ilx mention of Treacle Walker.

dow, Saturday, 5 October 2024 20:46 (two months ago) link

i pulled the trigger on the first three mole books. etsy was the only place i could find a good deal for the first three books! someone should really reissue them.

scott seward, Saturday, 5 October 2024 23:03 (two months ago) link

enjoy

they are pretty dense, iirc, you wont blitz through them too quickly

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Saturday, 5 October 2024 23:12 (two months ago) link

What other Garner should I read? All of it?

Yes, there's only nine novels (ten if you include The Stone Book Quartet which is four interlinked stories) and none of them are long. Plus what I've read of the short fiction is equally good. Haven't read anything from the 'Other Books' section from the link below, I'm guessing they're mostly for younger readers? Plus Where Shall We Run To? is a memoir.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Garner#Works

RIO Speedwagon (Matt #2), Sunday, 6 October 2024 02:13 (one month ago) link

Thanks! Am I ready for Red Shift---?

Emma Donoghue recalls reading Red Shift as a teenager: "It looked like other Garners I had read: a children's fantasy. But Red Shift, with its passionately bickering adolescent lovers and vertiginous plunges through the wormhole of time, shook me to my core every time I read it, and still does... Garner makes the past numinous, terrifyingly real: anything but passed."[42]
Think I need to check Emma Donoghue as well, going by that and links in there---right?

dow, Sunday, 6 October 2024 04:20 (one month ago) link

Finished Red Shift six months ago and still have it on my desk because I'm convinced I'm going to solve the cipher.

default damager (lukas), Sunday, 6 October 2024 04:57 (one month ago) link

i pulled the trigger on the first three mole books. etsy was the only place i could find a good deal for the first three books! someone should really reissue them.

― scott seward, Saturday, 5 October 2024 23:03 (three days ago) bookmarkflaglink

enjoy

they are pretty dense, iirc, you wont blitz through them too quickly

― tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Saturday, 5 October 2024 23:12 (three days ago) bookmarkflaglink

can scott do a mole book reax thread where he shares his trauma and everyone who read them earlier relives their own trauma

Tim F, Tuesday, 8 October 2024 02:15 (one month ago) link

Stroke it Mole

Ward Fowler, Tuesday, 8 October 2024 02:24 (one month ago) link

you guys are scaring me!

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 October 2024 02:46 (one month ago) link

looking forward though.

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 October 2024 02:47 (one month ago) link

W-what are the---mole books---?

dow, Tuesday, 8 October 2024 20:06 (one month ago) link

one who must ask has not yet achieved stoneness

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Tuesday, 8 October 2024 20:09 (one month ago) link

(duncton books, William horwood)

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Tuesday, 8 October 2024 20:10 (one month ago) link

kirstein (the steerswoman) (trilogy, I think?)

― Ima Gardener (in orbit), Wednesday, September 18, 2024 5:57 PM (three weeks ago)

It's planned as 7 books and she has written 4. There hasn't been a new book in two decades and her next book is not in that series.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 10 October 2024 20:23 (one month ago) link

i dont want to come across as harsh but that should be prison time tbh

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Friday, 11 October 2024 22:35 (one month ago) link

I was discussing the other day that this sort of thing isn't uncommon at all. There's tons of writers who've had an ending for their series in their heads for decades but demanding day jobs, right issues, depression, illness, other book series and many other things get in the way. If anyone should be punished it should be editors who keep asking for trilogies, quartets or more and don't allow the writer to complete them if the early books sell poorly.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 12 October 2024 02:14 (one month ago) link

otm

mookieproof, Saturday, 12 October 2024 02:39 (one month ago) link

i said what i said

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Saturday, 12 October 2024 09:09 (one month ago) link

That's a lot of dead people in jail.

I think it comes with the territory, if series epics are what you like to write then there's a very high probability that you won't finish them all, or even one of them.

It seems like there's quite a lot of writers who do series that consist of standalones and their fans don't know how many further books were intended. I just found out that Gormenghast was planned as at least 5 books.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 12 October 2024 16:35 (one month ago) link

three weeks pass...

can scott do a mole book reax thread where he shares his trauma and everyone who read them earlier relives their own trauma

― Tim F, Tuesday, 8 October 2024 02:15 (four weeks ago) bookmarkflaglink

genuinely seeking an update scott

i love those books fiercely but jesus christ they tore me to bits

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Wednesday, 6 November 2024 23:20 (four weeks ago) link

haha, sorry, didn't see this. i'm reading those daniel woodrell books first and then it will be mole winter. i'm just in a groove with the woodrell stuff. inspiring to me. but i'll get in a mole hole before you know it!

scott seward, Friday, 8 November 2024 20:54 (three weeks ago) link

you need not sound so enthusiastic we are only waiting for your devastation

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Friday, 8 November 2024 21:52 (three weeks ago) link

i am still a little frightened...

scott seward, Friday, 8 November 2024 23:49 (three weeks ago) link

yes. correct approach.

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Saturday, 9 November 2024 00:12 (three weeks ago) link

is The Black Company a fun read at all? I see mookieproof described it as “military porn” upthread and I think I could be down for some of that in a dark fantasy setting.

brimstead, Sunday, 17 November 2024 23:48 (two weeks ago) link

Someone here liked it. I read a bit of the first book and thought it was okay, but maybe it wasn’t quite my thing.

Sir Lester Leaps In (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 17 November 2024 23:59 (two weeks ago) link

I tried it, having heard people rave about it, but it's a bit try-hard. Not terrible writing, but frequently unpleasant and with deus ex machina magic stuff that can do whatever the plot demands at the time. Didn't bother past the end of book 1.

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Monday, 18 November 2024 00:27 (two weeks ago) link

ie it was mostly the opposite of fun

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Monday, 18 November 2024 00:27 (two weeks ago) link

i would send someone to joe abercrombie instead, easier read if nothing else

tuah dé danann (darraghmac), Monday, 18 November 2024 00:32 (two weeks ago) link

ty all

brimstead, Monday, 18 November 2024 16:19 (two weeks ago) link


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