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[personal profile] lunabee34
1.

Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales, Children, and the Culture IndustryHappily Ever After: Fairy Tales, Children, and the Culture Industry by Jack D. Zipes

My rating: 2 of 5 stars


Parts of this are interesting. I didn't know anything about the origins of Pinocchio, and I learned some interesting facts about Walt Disney and early animation. But mostly this was very boring. Also the last two chapters took a weird turn and were more about the culture industry (sports, university, capitalism in general) and so seemed like they were just tacked on rather than actually belonging to the same book.



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2.

Children of Blood and Bone (Legacy of OrĂ¯sha, #1)Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


I really enjoyed this book. It's fantasy, but the setting and culture are heavily inspired by Africa. In this world, magic once existed but was only gifted to some people. Some magic users abused their magical powers; some non-magic users became extremely frightened of magic users. As a result magic was eradicated, adult magic users were killed, and young magic users turned into a kind of slave labor. The world building is fascinating.

The four protagonists are are all teenaged--Zel, the magic user, and her brother Tzain on the one hand; Amari and Inan, the princess and prince of the land whose father is responsible for extinguishing magic and committing genocide. They all have to learn to trust one another and see good in each other. Each side has preconceived notions overturned even though some of the distance between them seems unbridgeable.

I love what happens at the end of the book and will be interested to see what happens in the sequel.



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3. Which segues me into a discussion of magic. The whole time I was reading Children of Blood and Bone, I couldn't stop thinking about the MCU, Harry Potter, Buffy, and a whole bunch of other canons in which a magical (or super-powered) minority lives in a non-magical world.


So, I realize YMMV and that this is probably a controversial thing to say on meme given how every MCU thread on meme devolves into some kind of wank that centers around this very issue, LOL, but when I watch Civil War, I feel like the movie itself is clearly depicting Steve and Company as right in their refusal to sign the Accords. Tony isn't depicted as a villain; he's portrayed sympathetically and as if he has noble goals and that there's some truth to what he wants to achieve, but that the Accords aren't the way to do that. Within the logic of the movie, I agree. I mean, what instantly happens? They're all put in some horrific prison by Ross who truly is a villain (even though what he did to Bruce doesn't show up in this particular movie). However, outside of the logic of the movie, I am totally with Tony.

In a world where people can do magic or have superpowers and the granting thereof is random in a lot of ways, magic is extremely scary. It isn't as if these powers are granted to people for their innate goodness or nobility (Steve throwing himself on a grenade aside). The thought of someone just having the power to burn people alive with a snap of the fingers or manipulate people's thoughts or raise an army of the dead is pretty scary, and having some kind of mechanism in place to prevent people with powers from misusing them sounds like a great idea.

Of course, then the issue becomes what form that mechanism would take and how do you prevent it from becoming a way to discriminate against people, etc. So, I don't know what that mechanism should look like at all.

I was also thinking about Harry Potter where the kinds of magic that the students toss off at each other, the jinxes and hexes that are meant to be the equivalent of pranks or minor fisticuffs, are truly terrifying. They almost always involve body horror of some sort; they're mostly really painful and disfiguring. And while it's not all that strange to me that children born to magical families that grow up around that kind of magic just seem to think it a matter of course, I always think when I reread that the Muggleborn students would freak the fuck out.

I want the HP stories where the Muggleborn students get PTSD from being transformed into inanimate objects against their will or have recurrent nightmares about their arms turning into noodles or have difficulty developing real relationships with anyone because someone looked into their minds. So, get on that, y'all.

SPOILERS for Children of Blood and Bone: In the book, both Zel and Inan's arguments about magic are given equal weight. Inan's fear of magic and its potential for abuse are treated equally as valid as Zel's desire to live out her heritage and to use magic to break free from the genocidal reign of a madman. So what's the solution? Give everybody magic, naturally. In the last paragraph of the book, Zel's ritual to restore magic to the minority magic users goes wonky, and everybody gets it instead. I love it. It's very Chosen.

4. So, I apparently have very strong feelings about floral prints. After a Certain Age, I feel like floral prints (particularly those which look like they have been lifted from a couch in a 1980s living room painted country blue with mauve carpet and throw pillows) are aging for women. They almost always make me wonder if you're headed to the Senior Citizens Club to play bingo with MeeMaw.

Date: 2018-10-02 01:28 pm (UTC)
havocthecat: the lady of shalott (Default)
From: [personal profile] havocthecat
Wolverine was not the star of the graphic novel. Kitty Pryde was the main character and the one who went back in time, and things went very differently. (God, I love her. She's one of my favorite X-Men. Again, much more of a main character in the comics than she ever was in the films, depending on the era, and allowed to have a huge, years-long coming of age experience.)

I'd read it because it's a very different experience, and Days of Future Past informs everything. It's a seminal X-Men work.
Edited Date: 2018-10-02 01:29 pm (UTC)

Date: 2018-10-05 12:55 am (UTC)
havocthecat: the lady of shalott (Default)
From: [personal profile] havocthecat
BARELY and she has been recast every time. She is the genius brunette bubbly peppy teen who grew up into a tough leader and is from the Chicago suburbs, and was introduced at 13, and I started reading her when I was 11, so I of course imprinted on her at that age. Also she has a pet dragon. And is a latent magic user. Seriously, I'm a ridiculous fan of Kitty Pryde. (Probably best not to ask the terrible things Joss Whedon has done to her during his X-Men run.)

There are DECADES' worth of spoilers here: http://marvel.wikia.com/wiki/Katherine_Pryde_(Earth-616)

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