(urth) Father Inire as Dionysus
Lee Berman
severiansola at hotmail.com
Mon Oct 24 19:43:41 PDT 2011
> Can the custom of calling the sea-monsters 'Megatherians' be
> sanctified in the same way?
>Jeff Wilson: Sure, since they are megatherians, though perhaps not the
>same people as depicted in _Lives of the Seventeen Megatherians_.
Well, yes, megatherian means "great beast" and Abaia is sometimes referred
to as Great Beast Abaia. It seems like one of the easier puzzles to solve.
I don't understand why the book can't be about the sea monsters though. Don't
they have lives?
Jeff if you are implying that our myths and legends of ancient gods and monsters
were probably inspired by various real kings and mean guys, I agree. However I
think Wolfe, while also sort of agreeing, makes his fiction a little more blurred
on the lines of myth and reality.
I REALLY think Wolfe uses an animalistic nature to mark the demonic from the angelic
(as the Bible also does). We have the great beasts in the ocean, we have Inire and
his monkey nature and The Cumaean and her snakey nature. This is in contrast to
Barbatus and Famulimus who wear horrible animal masks but only to disguise their
superhuman beauty.
You have to wonder about Tzadkiel though. He displays animalistic trends (meaning
the monkey-like Zak, his butterfly wings and the mention of his "larvae). But he/she
also possesses superhuman beauty. An all-in-one god? Angel and demon? Hm.......
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