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Sparrow ([personal profile] sweet_sparrow) wrote in [community profile] books2010-02-19 10:43 am

What're you reading?

I'm curious, what's everyone reading right about now?

I'm currently doing some more of my university course prep reading because "Read this small section of the book" means "read the whole book" to me. (I mean, if you're not going to read the whole thing, what's the point?)

I've recently finished up Two Medieval Outlaws by Glyn Burgess, which translates two romances about outlaws and which was a lot of fun. I've also finished up The Alliterative Morte Arthure, which just proves, again, that I don't get along with medieval texts and am staring at The Stanzaic Le Morte Arthur before delving into Malory's more well-known Le Morte d'Arthur.

In between I've been reading The Magicians and Mrs. Quent by Galen Beckett (well, I was until I finished it. ^-~) It was a lot of fun. Now I know why I've seen comments along the lines of "Austen, but with magic!" and the like. It's, obviously, more nuanced than that (and certainly not like, say, Pride and Prejudice and ZombiesThe Harp of the Grey Rose by Charles de Lint and I also need to reread Susan Cooper's The Dark Is Rising at some point so I can take notes and figure out if I can get enough out of the book to write an essay on it. And I should really, really pick up Kay's The Last Light of the Sun some time soon. I promised a friend to read it ages ago. >> Plus there's the group read too...

(Oh, and I should be rereading Shakespeare for that course too. I have too many books...)

So... what're you reading this month? ^-~
shanaqui: Akihiko and Mitsuru from Persona 3, holding guns to each others' heads. ((AkihikoMitsuru) Fatal)

[personal profile] shanaqui 2010-02-20 10:43 am (UTC)(link)
I thiiiink I read the first five or so books when I was a child, so I think I'm retreading old ground here, but I'm not sure. I'll know better when I actually knuckle down to reading, haha.

Alsoooo, reading this post again I don't know why I didn't go !!!Arthur!!!, since King Arthur is one of my big things... though I've never heard of or read the Alliterative Morte Arthure, or the Stanzaic Morte Arthure (sadly, I mostly know modern versions of the story -- so far). How old are they? Are they English or French or something else in origin? Are they in translation? What language are they in originally? I'm guessing if they're medieval and English, they're in Middle English? If you don't mind, can you tell me anything you know about them?

...Sorry, I'm a lit student who specialises mostly in medieval texts (and translating them), and I'm planning on doing the course at my uni focused on King Arthur next year. References to Arthur always make me a biiiit overexcited.

Also, I know I could certainly write essays on The Dark is Rising -- it's one of my favourite books. The whole series, or just the single book? What kind of essay are you thinking of writing about it? *nosy*

And Guy Gavriel Kay! ♥ I recently reread... most of his books. I've got The Lions of Al-Rassan on my reread soon list.
shanaqui: River from Firefly. (Default)

[personal profile] shanaqui 2010-02-20 11:24 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I think so! I think judging from the 20 pages I just read I might've liked them more when I read them when I was younger than I do just now... but I do like Terry Pratchett's writing in general, so I'm going to keep going with it. If I really don't get into it, I might try dipping into the books in other ways, e.g. by story groups.

Heee. I've studied Malory, but only sections, and briefly, so we didn't look much at his sources or anything. I thiiiink I've got a copy of a translation of the French poem.

If you would send it to me, that would be amazing! I like having pre-owned books, they come with a mini-history of their own, haha.

Ooooooh. Merriman's a bit more difficult to write about than some of the aspects, 'cause he's kind of elusive, really. I keep meaning to somehow get my hands on this essay and read it -- I don't know how relevant it would be to you, or whether maybe you've seen it already, but from what I can gather, it has bits about how Will learns his magic and the Anglo-Saxon influence on that, which could be interesting/relevant for you!

What have you already read by Kay? He's got a new book coming out in April or so, I'm so excited.

(Also, I just looked at your profile, and you sound interesting, and hey, I have synaesthesia too! Can I add you/have access? I need more friends on Dreamwidth!)
Edited (Some of my sentences were not proper sentences! What?) 2010-02-20 11:24 (UTC)
shanaqui: Firefly quote. Text: time for some thrilling heroics. ((Firefly) Thrilling heroics)

[personal profile] shanaqui 2010-02-20 12:41 pm (UTC)(link)
Yes, that's what I thought. It probably helps to be in the right mood for them, too. Not sure I am right now, much as I want to be reading.

I read the whole thing, too, although my version was somewhat abridged (the lecturer assured me I wasn't missing anything spectacular, haha). I'm pretty bad at getting round to reading classics too, sigh.

Thank you! Yay.

That's true, he is. You think of the Arthurian legends, and you tend to think of Merlin as a central figure, but, aside from the BBC Merlin tv series, I can't think of any Arthurian lit I've come across recently that does have Merlin at the very center. One of my lecturers, Stephen Knight, recently published a book, Merlin: Knowledge and Power Through the Ages, which I really want to take a look at, if not buy for myself. (He also writes on the Robin Hood tradition and crime fiction, and I need to get my hands on more of that, too -- I did a module on Robin Hood last semester, and I'm doing Crime Fiction this semester.)

Heee, I'm glad someone else I know is looking forward to it as much as I am (apart from my mother, who, in the way of mothers, doesn't really count). I think you're missing the sequel to Sailing to Sarantium, which is Lord of Emperors, unless you have a collected edition of some sort? It's a duology and they don't really stand alone, but oh, it's amazing. Which I say of almost all of Kay's work. Probably ranked in terms of my favourites, best to worst, ignoring the book of poetry, it goes: The Fionavar Tapestry, Tigana, Sailing to Sarantium/Lord of Emperors, The Lions of Al-Rassan, A Song for Arbonne, The Last Light of the Sun, Ysabel. But most of them are so closely ranked it's so haaaard. Ysabel is my least favourite, I think, but I still loved parts of it. It's a sequel to The Fionavar Tapestry that miiiight have been better if he'd worked a bit harder to separate it out and make it new.

(Yay! Subscribed and given you access back.)
shanaqui: River from Firefly. (Default)

[personal profile] shanaqui 2010-02-20 01:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Good Omens, the book he wrote with Neil Gaiman, is one of those books I'm always in the mood for, but with the rest of his writing I've had to pick my moments, really. My mind isn't on reading very much at the moment because I've started replaying one of my favourite RPGs, and the nostalgia (and addiction) are strong...

Haha, if nothing else you brought it to my attention and I can get my own copy! So thank you for that.

I can't think of anything apart from the BBC series, off-hand, but I'm sure I must have read something sometime. I'll have to look... I'm curious now.

My course has a shocking amount of choice even compared to other courses in the UK, I think. There's basically nothing compulsory after the first year, which meant I picked an amazing set of modules this year (I'm in second year). Robin Hood, Creative Writing, Intro to Old English, Tennyson, Children's Literature, Crime Fiction, Myth & Saga, Old English: The Exeter Book, Myth & Modernism, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight and Women's Poetry. (Can you, ah, tell where my interests lie...? Hahaha.) Not to rub it in your face or anything -- there's downsides! Like the fact that each course is only about eleven weeks long, so if there's a lot of texts, we don't go into as much depth as I'd like.

I liked A Song for Arbonne a lot more the second time I read it, which surprised me. Actually, I've found it the same with almost all Kay's books except Ysabel -- I realised how good it was the second time through. Almost all of his stuff is excellent -- and I still gave even Ysabel four out of five stars, I think. It's good, it's just not up to Kay's standard, which is why it disappoints a lot of his fans.

(I post... every day. Sometimes twice a day. About things going on in my life. I'm told that I make it interesting, but sometimes it doesn't feel like it. Anyway, feel free to comment at any time, even if it's only barely relevant -- I really like chatting with people, and you've been a lot of fun so far!)
shanaqui: Merlin from BBC's Merlin. ((Merlin) Light up)

[personal profile] shanaqui 2010-02-20 01:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Yep! I love FFVIII. I just downloaded it for my PSP, and my girlfriend's replaying it too at the same time, so we're having a lot of fun with it.

Cardiiiifffff. ♥ Says the very biased Welsh girl. *grin* I have... probably more than twelve books per semester, though it depends. Because I do a lot of translation, that's just one book in which a lot of different things are collected. (That course sounds... deadly.)

Yes! There's always something new or something you can look at from a different angle... They're really good for discussions, too, because of that. I want to be as skilled as Kay, too. I was writing in his style for a bit last week, which was amazingly fun.

I can't believe that throughout this thread I haven't used any Merlin icons. Look at his cute wee face, as my flatmate would say.
shanaqui: River from Firefly. ((Arthur) Prince McSulkypants)

[personal profile] shanaqui 2010-02-20 06:46 pm (UTC)(link)
FFVIII was my first ever RPG. ♥ Suuuch nostalgia playing it now. I never tried it on the PC -- I had an awful feeling it wouldn't adapt well...

Cardiff feels like home to me, which is why I'm so biased. I grew up away from Wales, so it's wondrous to be home. Heh.

A bit of both, when it comes to translation. I love translating and I do more than I have to, but some of the translation is for my course. E.g. we only had to translate three riddles, I did all of them I could find, and I'm about five weeks ahead of everyone else... Our exam just after Christmas was heavy on translation, so I did extremely well. *grin*

I need to watch more Merlin... I've only seen five episodes.
shanaqui: River from Firefly. ((ArthurMorgana) We're clearly awesome)

[personal profile] shanaqui 2010-02-20 11:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeaaah, that would suck. It took me a while to figure out the new controls for the PSP, 'cause that wasn't exactly self-evident either, ugh.

Indeed! And hopefully the rest of my family will move back here, in time.

I have quite a methodical mind, in some ways, and I do love carefully piecing together a translation.