(urth) Time-traveling through the Urth list

Gem Caccetta gemcaccetta at yahoo.com
Wed Jun 19 13:25:21 PDT 2019


 
Marc-

Yes, I’m reading through the entire list! (Except for posts about orbits of Blue and Green or astronomical researches into the location of St. Croix and St Anne…all that science is beyond me, and I’m not sure it would affect my enjoyment of the novels if I did understand it.) Your posts brought a breath of fresh air to the list, imho. Although I may not always agree with your theories, they provided a fresh perspective. I especially admire how you stuck to your guns in the face of challenges from minds I find daunting! And at Ultan’s Library I see you received a Hugo nomination in 2016…return to reputability indeed!













Hi David,

Blokey kind of writer for sure! Although I have done much head-shaking and cringing at the treatment of women in GW’s novels, the beauty of his language, the fantastic mysteriousness and deep philosophizing of his books kept me reading. One summer I read the entire New Sun series aloud to a friend. Amazing! Considering how much GW loves nesting verbal storytelling within written stories, it shouldn’t have surprised me how evocative his books would be real aloud. I also read Soldier of the Mist aloud to a friend.

For some reason, this sentence has always stuck with me: “Perhaps I am to be mad as well as clouded of memory, and this voice was a phantom of that all-obscuring mist”. Wonderful on the tongue. I give Wolfe a pass for his portrayal of women in the soldier books, remembering a book by Sarah B. Pomeroy Goddesses, Whores, Wives, and Slaves: Women in Classical Antiquity. That title sums up the female characters in the soldier books, so I believe in this case Wolfe was being authentic to the time period.




Gem

    On Tuesday, June 18, 2019, 9:39:51 PM EDT, Marc Aramini <marcaramini at gmail.com> wrote:  
 
 Gem are you reading through the whole list? Phew. Lots of zeitgeist shifts. Eventually you will see me return to reputability. You are at about the nadir of the list for me in time. I thought the list made note of Alice’s passing - the archives are sketchy from 2014-2018 in parts (and I think in 2002-3 as well)
Hope you enjoy your perusal. Marc
On Tuesday, June 18, 2019, Gem Caccetta <gemcaccetta at yahoo.com> wrote:


Greetings, Urth-lings! 
I have been reading Gene Wolfe since 1981, when a friend gave me a copy of Shadow of The Torturer. Over the decades (yikes!) I have read every novel by Wolfe, and many stories. A year ago, when reading the New Sun books yet again, I decided to see if there were any GW discussion groups on line, and found this list. Since then, I have been reading several entries every day, starting from the very beginning in 1996. At present, I am in 2002. It struck me how lupine it is, how Peace-like, to float through time, becoming acquainted with a cast of characters, in some cases watching young minds mature. What caused me to decide to finally join the list and drop this pebble into the ocean?
Being a woman, I followed with great interest the posts of alga—Alice K. Turner. Her point of view was so frequently mine. I was sad to learn, when I finally searched her name to perhaps see a photo, that Alice passed away in 2015. By that time she had retreated into the past of the list, as I could find no acknowledgment of her passing. I, for one, will miss her voice as my reading takes me into the future.
It was Alice’s posts about John Crowley’s Little, Big that led me to read it. The list also informed me that G.K. Chesterton was a favorite of GW. And I read with agreement posts pertaining to GW’s problematic depiction of women. So my eyebrows went skyward when Book One, Chapter I of Little, Big begins with this epigraph by Chesterton: Men are men, but Man is a woman. In the first two chapters, Crowley introduces us to four strong, fascinating women the likes of which GW never approached (with the exception perhaps of Aunt Olivia in Peace.) I guess this was one aspect of Chesterton outside GW’s ken…
With Alice Turner in my mind, I popped into 2019 to make note of this little coincidence. Now Gene Wolfe is gone as well. I will now return to 2002. To those of you still walking this Urth, and for those who have left it, you are all still alive, receiving visitors in the corridors of time.



gem



p.s. a lovely post on Alice’s passing:  Alice K. Turner Passes Away

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Alice K. Turner Passes Away

By Andrew Porter: I returned from nearly a week away from the computer to find the shocking and horrifying news ...
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