Tag Archives: mythology

First Monday Book Day: Olio

My April reading was a mish-mash of whatever books I had ready to hand, so I couldn't really come up with any connection to riff on in the intro.  Instead I thought of the word olio, and figured I should just take the opportunity to recommend Tyehimba Jess' really excellent book: OLIO

Rambling introduction accomplished.

The problem with being on a book publisher's email list is sometimes they send me pictures of their newly published books and then I think, "Ooh, those look cool. I bet I would like reading those..." and now I have more books in my house that I didn't even know existed before that email arrived.  I'm weak.

"Attila" is the final work of Aliocha Coll, an experimental Spanish writer.  It's described as "untranslatable" and "a stunning labryinth of allegory and metaphor".  Should be fun!

"Attila" is a fictionalized version of Coll's attempts to finish "Attila" and a meditation on authors that continue to be dedicated to their vision in the face of failure and dismissal.  More fun!


Books Read in April:

"Wizard of the Crow" was big and mythic and interesting and I really wish is had stuck the landing at the end of its 760 pages. It's the story of a fictional modern African nation that must deal with a despot, colonialism, exploitation, and history.  Magic and reason are both employed (sometimes) and it ends up quite often feeling like a myth or a parable in a really interesting way.

"Ordinary Wolves" was a really arresting book.  It told only its own story.  The main character, Cutuk, grows up in an igloo in remote Alaska and then must find his place inside or outside of society.  He hunts, he moves to Anchorage, he moves back to the tundra. He has people that he looks up to and those he fears.  A good coming-of-age narrative, but with a unique perspective on the world.

"Tongues" was a graphic novel that retells the Promethean myth with a post-apocalyptic bent.  It was interesting enough that I'll read volume 2 when it arrives, but I wasn't blown away.

 

 

Enslaved – Thoughts Like Hammers

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PVMWXZC-_L8

And now we've come to the end of my week. Thanks for letting me reflect, everyone. This is my most recent album purchase and I became addicted from the opening riff of this song, which opens the album Riitiir, they're most recent release. I really need to explore their back catalog. This is a pretty great mix of the stuff I like about heavy metal. There's the growl and the clean vocals, excellent guitar work, an obvious passion for what they're playing/singing about, and norse mythology related lyrics (always a good source for this kind of music.)

3 votes, average: 8.33 out of 103 votes, average: 8.33 out of 103 votes, average: 8.33 out of 103 votes, average: 8.33 out of 103 votes, average: 8.33 out of 103 votes, average: 8.33 out of 103 votes, average: 8.33 out of 103 votes, average: 8.33 out of 103 votes, average: 8.33 out of 103 votes, average: 8.33 out of 10 (3 votes, average: 8.33 out of 10)
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First Monday Book Day: The age of recycling

The oldest trick in the literary book is to re-write somebody else's story. And of course, it helps to steal from really good stories.

This month's selection, James Lovegrove's The Age of Odin, is the third in his non-trilogy threesome of godpunk/military scifi retellings of ancient mythological stories. Here, it is Ragnarök with M16s and RPGs.

I was suckered into purchasing this number by the back-cover blurb from The Guardian (actually about another of the three books), "The kind of complex, action-oriented SF Dan Brown would write if Dan Brown could write."

Seriously. I was so amused that the publisher (Solaris Books) had the balls to take such a swipe at another writer on the cover of the book that I gave this one a chance. Now that I have, I will offer my own version of the plug: "The kind of pulpy, shallow action-oriented SF that Neil Gaiman would write if he were 15."

Ok, that's a bit harsh. I found this book mildly entertaining, if derivative (some of the ideas appear to be lifted from -- err, homages to -- Gaiman's fantastic American Gods; in both, the protagonists meet up with more-than-he-seems-to-be old man after a car accident; Gaiman's kills the protagonist's wife; Lovegrove's kills his ex-army buddy; etc. etc.). Lovegrove isn't overly interested in developing either story or character, but he seems to be pretty good at writing blood-and-gore fight scenes. Pretty much the whole book is fight scenes.

This is beach reading, perfect for a teenage boy who has already seen Thor and X-Men: First Class, waiting eagerly for Green Lantern to open. Disposable, largely devoid of any effort to raise Big Ideas, and somewhat hampered by a rather clumsily done development of the bad guy (Loki) as a thinly veiled Sarah Palin. Oooh, so topical! But it reads quickly for its 585 pages. And, perhaps most importantly, it got me in the mood to start George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series.
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