(urth) Fwd: Babbiehorn?: Was: a sincere question mostly for roy
Gerry Quinn
gerry at bindweed.com
Sat Nov 19 03:33:10 PST 2011
From: James Wynn
> > If the Rajan is any part Neighbour, that part is completely amnesiac. Too much
> > amnesia to go around. He’s not a Neighbour.
> Why do you think a Neighbor should be an expert on Mother's worshippers?
> I'm not claiming the narrator ever was one.
It’s just an example. He knows squat about the Neighbours. He knows all about the Whorl.
And I haven’t got to that bit yet, but the Neighbours treat him as a representative of the human race. If they were taking over that would work (he could be a sort of Manchurian Candidate) but since they are apparently handing off Blue to the humans, why spoil the ceremony by dealing with a fake human? [And no, it *doesn’t* mirror the Incarnation.]
> Secondly, this shows remarkable nativity regarding the concepts Wolfe is
> dealing with...“But concerning that day and hour no one knows, not even the
> angels of heaven, nor the Son, but the Father only."
The nativity you propose is indeed remarkable ;-)
> Thirdly, he was a young Neighbor (all those little trees in that broken glass dome).
I don’t see how that follows, but anyway whether he is or not he seemingly knows enough Neighbour lore to do whatever he did with Horn. So how come he forgot it?
> Finally, I offer Able. Some people argued that it was odd that he was able to
> become an accomplished archer so quickly. Wolfe's answer was, "Well remember
> he's spent some years in Aelfrice." So why do he display such ignorance of the
> place throughout the novel?
Different book, different genre, and yes, amnesia that we are *told* about in personalities that we are *told* about.
- Gerry Quinn
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