(urth) Father Inire theory cont.

David Stockhoff dstockhoff at verizon.net
Sat Dec 11 12:24:15 PST 2010


Excellent observations.

I'd add that myths contain everything too, in a sense (part of the 
lesson of the Brown Book, as you say), and so it seems that the library 
is full of mythical monsters. After all, they are the coolest part of 
myths, as everyone (or every boy) knows. ;)

On 12/11/2010 2:26 PM, Andrew Mason wrote:
> Lee Berman wrote:
> 3. Ultan says that on the Feast Day, their guild marches down "Iubar 
> Street" conspicuously mentioning
>> the name twice. Iubar is a Latin word invoking radiant light, a splendid, glorious appearance,
>> the morning star, and the chemical phosphorus. All these are directly related to Lucifer.
> They are also related to the sun. Iubar Street is mentioned again near
> the end of _Urth_, when Eata says there was a party there to celebrate
> Valeria's second marriage. I would take it that it is the main street
> of the city, and represents the people's devotion (nominally, at
> least) to the New Sun. (Note also that the cathedral has candles
> representing the Claw.)
>> 4. Ultan mentions books bound in the hides of echidnes and krakens. This could mean spiny anteater
>> and giant squid skins. But any mention in this story of a giant sea monster and the Mother of All
>> Monsters/wife of Typhon raises a red flag for me.
>> 6. Ultan is especially familiar with the book Lives of the Seventeen Megatherians as well as Wonders Of
>> Urth and Sky. Both books seem to deal with the monsters in the sea and their origins.
> I would say that both _Wonders of Urth and Sky_ and the library as a
> whole contain monsters because they contain _everything_.
>


---
avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean.
Virus Database (VPS): 101211-1, 12/11/2010
Tested on: 12/11/2010 3:24:16 PM
avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2010 AVAST Software.
http://www.avast.com






More information about the Urth mailing list