Unpopular Demand

Aug 12, 2007 17:41

If I regularly posted, say, every Sunday, running commentary (not necessarily positive) on some or another historical novel (I'm aiming for bargain-basement stuff, here, not your Dorothy Dunnett or Sharon Kay Penman or anything like that), and called it the Sunday Send-Up, how many of you would evince even minimal interest in reading it ( Read more... )

books omg, bad bad history, historical fiction

Leave a comment

Comments 11

augustuscaesar August 12 2007, 23:17:48 UTC
It'd depend a lot on how you do it. I'm not a fan of historical fiction, but I'm a fan of you being silly, so we'll see *g*

Reply

shake_the_stars August 13 2007, 00:02:13 UTC
In other words, you're a fan of me torturing myself with crap, in public *g*

Reply

augustuscaesar August 13 2007, 00:59:09 UTC
But of course!

Reply


dethorats August 13 2007, 05:30:13 UTC
Well I am always up for running commentary about how things have gone wrong. Don't read a lot of historical fiction myself but hey, maybe it'll be inspiring?!

Reply

shake_the_stars August 14 2007, 02:40:06 UTC
The idea that I would ever be inspiring causes lulz. However, thanks for the vote of confidence. XD

Reply


ocarina August 13 2007, 13:47:10 UTC
I would never, ever turn down Shogun snark.

Reply

shake_the_stars August 14 2007, 02:32:36 UTC
Hurrah!

And, you know, there really isn't enough Shogun snark. The Internets appear to be strangely lacking. It's only fair for me to do my bit. ;D

Reply


duokinneas August 13 2007, 16:11:45 UTC
Ooh, I love historical fiction, and people who can rip it apart and cite real historical knowledge as a basis to do so - that is to say, you - are just right for the reviewing job. I say "yay!" to this.

Also, Shogun != love. So, so much hatred... My mom's friend recommended it to me when she saw I was reading a book called The Samurai's Tale (I was twelve or thirteen at the time), and I kept thinking, "That'd never happen!" I can't remember liking a single character in it, which says something. I never read it again, which says the same something.

Also also, communities = love. ^_^

Reply

shake_the_stars August 14 2007, 02:26:30 UTC
*pets her yaying seahorse* Huzzah! An ukelette returns from darkest Oregon!

I was about 9 the first time I read Shogun, or tried to (I got all the way through the first volume), and remember very little of this first experience, other than that there was quite a bit I didn't understand. (Namely, the persecution of Christians. Why would anyone want to persecute Catholics? We're bitchin'!) I was a bit of an enfant terrible.

The second time I tried to read Shogun, I was about 20 or 21 (I believe the former, since I spent most of my stint as a Wal-Bot pretending to be a samurai. Now you know where Yukichi comes from). At that point, I had discovered Yoshikawa Eiji, so I just groaned and said, "Fuck this, I'm gonna go read me some Blade of the Immortal."

At least in the mini-series, you got to see nekkid Shimada Yoko. WIN.

If I make a community for it, and at this point, I have almost decided I shall, I will let you know about it, loudly and with pointing and jumping up and down. ^_^

Reply

duokinneas August 15 2007, 21:45:45 UTC
Yup! Except that it was beautiful there, and it's dreadful here.

Mm, when I first read Shogun, I couldn't stand Christian evangelism -"I Was a Childhood Agnostic Wonder" - even in a historical context, so I was like, "Get them, get them, the culture-rapists!" Now I'm much, much more tolerant. Thank God! (Only mine is still not the Christian concept of God.)

True. My dad let me watch it after I started the book, forgetting that scene. He regretted it after he was very embarrassed to be watching it with me; the historical commentary we'd had going just died and dried up, right there.

Thanks! I'm excited about this, and I have a question: would it be just you reviewing, or do you have other history geek friends who might be willing to do the same? The more, the merrier! Plus, different perspectives are shiny.

Reply

shake_the_stars August 16 2007, 00:31:48 UTC
Real life always seems so much drearier after one comes back from a vacation. I don't think I'd want to live in Florida (for one thing, I love my fucking state), but Indiana seemed a bit lackluster for the next week.

As an adult, I understand that the Church was often used, or allowed itself to be used, as a front for colonization purposes in the not!West. As a child, because my family was all I knew and my family was Catholic, I was shocked and appalled. (I was to be more shocked and appalled when I lived in Texas and realized that evangelicals took themselves seriously. At that point, I was a militant atheist and I found religion in general shocking and appalling.)

I remember watching some of the miniseries, but I didn't realize there was nekkid Shimada Yoko until I was an adult. Now I feel cheated ( ... )

Reply


Leave a comment

Up