December meme

Dec 02, 2014 14:13

This is the post I was supposed to make on December 1, for
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books, fandom: points novels, memes

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halotolerant December 3 2014, 15:34:34 UTC
I had heard the 'Rathe and Eslingen were Bodie and Doyle' theory, as a common assertion rather than with any specific evidence for or against. I do note that the cover illustrations for the re-release of the Points novels show two men who look a heck of a lot like Martin Shaw and Lewis Collins, more I think than just me expecting to see that. I wonder if that was from Scott or the artist or the publisher or, maybe, just sheer coincidence ( ... )

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kindkit December 3 2014, 18:57:11 UTC
The cover illustrations do look very like them (more so than they should, given how Rathe and Eslingen are described in the books). I don't know if that was at Scott's direction or not, but I kind of wish it hadn't happened.

If people were saying "Rathe and Eslingen were inspired by Bodie and Doyle" I wouldn't be bothered. What drives me crazy is when people describe the Points books as a Pros AU, or say that Rathe and Eslingen are avatars of Bodie and Doyle. Even if the characters originated as that, which I don't know, they grew into being their own characters with their own histories and personalities. And if people insist on seeing them as Bodie and Doyle, they're going to miss the characters who are actually on the page ( ... )

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halotolerant December 6 2014, 15:25:29 UTC
Ooh, I've seen 'Parasol Protectorate' about and thought it looked fun but not yet read it on the basis that it looked full of het, but if that's balanced with canon queerness I'd certainly give them a try - thanks for the rec! They do sound like they might make good recovery reading. 'Gods of Gotham' is a good example, for me, actually of a book where a main protagonist het narrative didn't interfere with my enjoyment because it was interesting enough, with solid characters, and not the entire point of story with the crime just hanging off as detail, and because queerness was a Thing too. I do know I'll forgive weaker writing in queer-focussed novels because I'm more engaged by the protagonists, so when I enjoy a book with het, it's generally a good one! I think there's a lot of fic potential in the 'Gods of Gotham' 'verse - I've just got hold of the sequel 'Seven for a Secret', in which the queer narrative thread apparently continues. So far I'm certainly hoping there'll be more.

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just_ann_now December 3 2014, 20:27:48 UTC
*adds "God of Gotham" to my Goodreads list* Thanks!

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halotolerant December 6 2014, 15:25:49 UTC
*g* Glad to help! It's a good book, and a good crime novel too, I think.

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