(urth) shapeshifting Hethor
Chris
rasputin_ at hotmail.com
Sun May 28 14:47:22 PDT 2006
MSG said:
bsharp said:
> >Mg you don't say what you base your likelihood and almost certainties on,
> >though I think my post on building a mental mosaic applies.
>Shapeshifting
> >does not fit the picture you have built of Urth and so you discard it
> >whenever you see it.
>Absolutely not true. I pointed out the likely shapeshifting ability of
>Venant and could make an interesting case for the voiceshifting alzabo;
>I've
>no trouble with the notion of Hethor being a shapeshifter nor for Mother
>Pyrexia being the degenerate terminus of one such witcherly attempt; and in
>many respects Baldanders, some of the Megatherians, and the undines are
>beings that have chosen to change their shapes. This does not, however,
>mean
>that Father Inire periodically morphs himself into the two individuals you
>claim just because other individuals are able to shift their appearance.
Right, and I think it may again be time to point out that interpretation of
Wolfe tends to get into an occasional lunatic (in the memorable sense
presented in Foucoult's Pendulum) circle. That is, we tend to latch on to
one thing and then attempt to explain *everything* in terms of it, finding
connections everywhere we go - because it is easy to find connections of
some sort or another.
This came up in the infamous clone wars on this list, that were alluded to
recently, where (to exaggerate a bit) we started to reach a point where
everyone in the Urth cycle was a clone of Typhon (though I am not sure
whether we established whether, through some elaborate time-travelling
trick, Typhon was a clone of Typhon as well).
Borski's book, I think, is quite prone to this sort of thing. Given the
frequent mentions we've been seeing of that book, it might be good to keep
this in mind.
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