dragonyphoenix: (raven)

In Connie Willis’ Doomsday Book, Kivrin, a historian, travels back in time to experience the 1320s. An unfortunate accident lands her in 1348, just at the Black Death comes to England. Meanwhile, back in her time, a pandemic has hit Oxford and London.

One of the first things I noticed is that the quarantined area is running short on supplies, especially toilet paper! That gives you an idea of when I started reading. This ties into a theme of how everyone relates to the pandemic through their own issues. Mr. Dunworthy worries about Kivrin who he fears has been sent to the wrong time. Ms. Montoya, who’s stuck in quarantine, fears the damage the weather will do to the archaeological dig she can’t get back to. Mrs. Gaddson’s worried about her son’s health. American ringers are dismayed they can’t get to their concerts. I find that interesting because I’m watching my issues play out during this coronavirus.

One of the minor themes is about historical distance. A historian should maintain some sort of objectivity but living with people can toss that out the window. Even though the people around her, based on her time period, have died centuries earlier, Kivrin does all she can to save them.

This ties in with a main theme of the novel: in the words of Mr. Rogers’ mother, “look for the helpers.” So many people are trying to help each other even as they pursue their own concerns. Kivrin, struggling to save those dying of the plague. In the end, the novel is about hope. Kivrin talks about how “frightened and brave and irreplaceable they were” but that’s all of us.

I know I didn’t describe it well, but this is a fantastic book.

reading

Dec. 31st, 2018 11:37 pm
dragonyphoenix: Blackadder looking at scraps of paper, saying "It could use a beta" (Default)

I have a fair number of friends who post what they’ve been reading lately so I thought I’d give it a go.


Claire North’s The Sudden Appearance of Hope features a forgettable woman, forgettable in that once she’s out of sight people forget her in about a minute. It’s an interesting premise – although it reminds me of a story I read decades ago about a man who’s forgotten by everyone each morning – and the writing’s quite good. I’m about a third of the way through it and definitely recommend it.


Because I’m still under the weather – darn cold that won’t go away – I’ve been revisiting an old favorite, Lois McMaster Bujold’s Memory, my favorite of the Vorkosigan books. I think I like it because he grows up in this book, decides who he wants to be. I first read it when I was thinking along those same lines.


When I was even more ill and looking for something light, KJ Charles’ Band Sinister, a male / male romance that pokes fun at Gothic romances while being one. I read it twice.


And, of course, fanfiction! AMarguerite An Ever-Fixed Mark is a meta on the soulmark trope, an identifying mark that reveals ones soul-mate, using Pride and Prejudice. It’s a delightful read that allows you to pick your ending: Elizabeth Bennet married (at the end) to Mr. Darcy, Colonel Fitzwilliam, or the Duke of Wellington. She marries Colonel Fitzwilliam first in all of them and it’s fascinating to see her as a soldier’s wife, following the drum as it were. I think the author is a history buff if not a historian; she has the details down.

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dragonyphoenix: Blackadder looking at scraps of paper, saying "It could use a beta" (Default)
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