(urth) Ted = Goldwurm?
Eugene Zaretskiy
eugene.zar at gmail.com
Fri Apr 30 15:37:52 PDT 2010
On Fri, Apr 30, 2010 at 6:11 PM, Craig Brewer <cnbrewer at yahoo.com> wrote:
> That's an odd point, but interesting. My gut reaction is just error when Wolfe was putting together the list, but that's not as interesting as speculation. heh.
As someone who picked up his first Wolfe book a few years ago, I have
a question: have there been any _confirmed_ errors in Wolfe books? I
know that there was a typographical error or three in TBotNS with
regards to spelling of some unusual words. Have new editions of any of
Wolfe's books ever fixed errors that were significant to the
understanding of a certain sitation? Has Wolfe ever commented about
anything like that?
>
> Calling her "a friendly Japanese girl" seems to me like something "outside the fiction," perhaps, and making her out to be a facefox a kind of fabrication. And on that note, I found it odd that the Asian waitress mentioned that Winker was Chinese, even though she was supposed to be Japanese. (219) So is she just generally fluent in all Asian languages? Foxes sure have a lot of cultural leeway, apparently.
>
>
> And I found the "dream" explanation odd as well. Since Orizia was still far away, perhaps it was a dream state (or something else psychic) for her even though Bax could physically move to faerie because of the house? But I'm not sure if that actually explains anything substantially, especially not about Winker's name. Perhaps because she's his familiar, anything she does is actually his doing?
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----
> From: Roy C. Lackey <rclackey at stic.net>
> To: The Urth Mailing List <urth at lists.urth.net>
> Sent: Fri, April 30, 2010 1:01:43 PM
> Subject: Re: (urth) Ted = Goldwurm?
>
> Andrew wrote:
>> Absolutely - I was going to say something along the same lines but work
>> intervened. I was thinking that perhaps the "other things" might just
> have
>> been "women". Bax does of course get 3 women: Doris, Winkle and Millie
>> (assuming Winkle counts).
>
> That reminds me. It has to do with the issue of who compiled the list of
> characters, which lists Winker as: "Baxter Dunn's name for a friendly
> Japanese girl." That's not right. Winkle is the name Bax came up with for
> the talking vixen. He later mentioned several times that he didn't even know
> the name of the young woman who came to his bed. He first learned her name
> when she introduced herself to Orizia: "This lowly person is called Winker
> Inari." (147) Orizia was miles away in a "trance", her psychic visit.
>
> Is this significant, or just a mistake by Wolfe? Or is it an obscure clue?
> Or does it say something about the fictional Compiler?
>
> Keep in mind that Bax heard that name while in what Orizia insisted was a
> dream state, despite Bax's claim that he had actually climbed out a window
> and gotten lost in the woods. It was while still in the woods that he got
> the "faint" phone call from Hardaway about the meeting that night with the
> lawyer, Trelawny. The phone call came while he was still engaged with
> Orizia. So I suppose that it could be argued that the name Winker Inari came
> out of Bax's head and that he did come up with that name.
>
> -Roy
>
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--
Eugene Z
http://blog.eugenez.net
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