Book meme

Apr. 8th, 2021 09:24 am
scripsi: (Default)
[personal profile] scripsi
1. A book that haunts you

Haunted is more accurate, though- I’m over it now.

Lord Foul’s Bane by Stephen R. Donaldson.

When I was a child, the general view in Sweden was that Fantasy was a genre for children. It was definitely the view of the librarians at my local library, who placed everything fantasy-related in the children’s section. (S.F, on the other hand, was placed in the adult section and you had to be fifteen to take out anything from that section.) Anyhow, when I was 12, Lord Foul’s Bane was translated to Swedish, and, of course, but among the children’s books. It is, in case you haven’t read it, not a book for kids, not by a long shot. Many years later I saw someone summing up the plot along those lines:

Leprosy. Trauma. Being moved to another world. Trauma. Trauma. Evil entities. Trauma. Rape. Trauma. Trauma. Trauma. Trauma. Being moved back to our world. Trauma. Leprosy. Trauma.

Now, I have never read this book since that first time, and I certainly don’t think Fantasy should never be dark, or a protagonist always heroic, so this book (and series) may be very good. But I was completely unprepared for it at 12, and definitely way too young for it. I remembered it with a queasy feeling for years, and though it doesn’t shunt me anymore, I doubt I will ever want to re-read it.

All the questions:

1. A book that haunts you

2. A book that was an interesting failure

3. A book where you really wanted to be reading the "shadow" version of the book (as in, there are traces of a different book in the work and you would have much preferred to read that one)

4. A book with a worldbuilding detail that has stuck with you

5. A book where you loved the premise but the execution left you cold

6. A book where you were dubious about the premise but loved the work

7. The most imaginative book you've seen lately

8. A book that feels like it was written just for you

9. A book that reminds you of someone

10. A book that belongs to a specific time in your mind, caught in amber

11. A book that came to you at exactly the right time

12. A book that came to you at the wrong time

13. A book with a premise you'd never seen before quite like that

14. A book balanced on a knife edge

15. A snuffed candle of a book

16. The one you'd take with you while you were being ferried on dark underground rivers

17. The one that taught you something about yourself

18. A book that went after its premise like an explosion

19. A book that started a pilgrimage

20. A frigid ice bath of a book

21. A book written into your psyche

22. A warm blanket of a book

23. A book that made you bleed

24. A book that asked a question you've never had an answer to

25. A book that answered a question you never asked

26. A book you recommend but cannot love

27. A book you love but cannot recommend

28. A book you adore that people are surprised by

29. A book that led you home

30. A book you detest that people are surprised by

Date: 2021-04-08 07:31 am (UTC)
dolorosa_12: (daria)
From: [personal profile] dolorosa_12
Oh no! That book is definitely not a children's book, so I don't blame you for reacting to it in the way you did. (I tried to read it once when I was maybe 19 or 20 and couldn't get through it.)

Date: 2021-04-08 10:02 am (UTC)
malinaldarose: (Default)
From: [personal profile] malinaldarose
I first read that when I was about thirteen -- it's how I met one of my best friends, in fact, because I read it and then I saw him carrying a copy around and took the chance of speaking to him. But. I was a naive little thing and I actually didn't understand the rape until many years later.

Date: 2021-04-08 10:42 am (UTC)
dirtygreatknife: By me. (Default)
From: [personal profile] dirtygreatknife
I read it when I was 19, and *hated* it. Two of my high school friends were reading the series and loved it to bits and I couldn't understand why. The lead character had nothing redeeming in him--I tried to read the other books, but failed finishing them.

Date: 2021-04-09 09:40 am (UTC)
dirtygreatknife: By me. (Default)
From: [personal profile] dirtygreatknife
Same. They're really just unlikable books.

Date: 2021-04-08 12:30 pm (UTC)
thisbluespirit: (fantasy)
From: [personal profile] thisbluespirit
But I was completely unprepared for it at 12, and definitely way too young for it. I remembered it with a queasy feeling for years, and though it doesn’t shunt me anymore, I doubt I will ever want to re-read it.

Oh, no, ouch. I read some of those at 17 and I was still too young for them. (I read, um, 2-4? just to see if they would get better, and then wished I'd stopped much sooner, because no.) But they still stand out as something I'd never want to even look at again, even though I'm sure people are right they were good.
Edited Date: 2021-04-08 12:32 pm (UTC)

Date: 2021-04-09 08:07 am (UTC)
thisbluespirit: (Default)
From: [personal profile] thisbluespirit
Heh, I was just too fast a reader for my own good at that particular point in my life!

Date: 2021-04-08 02:01 pm (UTC)
liadt: Dynamic illustration of two horses (Bulman fishing)
From: [personal profile] liadt
I read both trilogies when I was about your age too. I wasn't haunted by it so I was either unfeeling or too young to understand it! I will the say the second trilogy is more depressing than the first and I wished I'd stuck to the first three.

Date: 2021-04-09 12:27 pm (UTC)
liadt: (DC Script)
From: [personal profile] liadt
Ha, ha, yes, the land went to pot, I think pollution or something.

Date: 2021-04-08 05:21 pm (UTC)
senmut: modern style black canary on right in front of modern style deathstroke (Default)
From: [personal profile] senmut
That whole series, which I read the first three of at 14, is NOT FOR CHILDREN, and definitely not YA at all.

Date: 2021-04-08 07:26 pm (UTC)
greghousesgf: (Hugh SF Music)
From: [personal profile] greghousesgf
oh god. My mean crazy ex fucking loved that book, which should have been a red flag.

Date: 2021-04-09 02:02 pm (UTC)
lirazel: An outdoor scene from the 2005 film Pride and Prejudice of Lizzie and her aunt and uncle reading at the foot of a tree ([film] extensive reading)
From: [personal profile] lirazel
When I was a child, the general view in Sweden was that Fantasy was a genre for children.

*facepalm*

Date: 2021-04-10 08:43 pm (UTC)
a_phoenixdragon: (Default)
From: [personal profile] a_phoenixdragon
Ye gods..never read it, but the description ALONE tells me there is no way that book should have been offered to small ones!

*HUGS*

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