<div>On Wed, Dec 14, 2011 at 1:21 PM, Marc Aramini <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:marcaramini@yahoo.com">marcaramini@yahoo.com</a>></span> wrote:</div>
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<div>I read The book of the new sun in the fourth grade and really liked it, but I would definitely have listed, say, something easier like Zelazny as my favorite at the time, but when I re-read it in the seventh grade I saw the beautiful beautiful structure of so many things, the mythic resonance. But I was raised so very very Catholic that even in the fourth grade I saw Severian as a cool torturing kind of end times Jesus with a big sword, relaxed "destruction based" eschatological morals and uninhibited sexuality. I used to draw pictures of him on my textbooks in school, sword raised and the sun highlighting it so that its shadow was a cross. Probably get in big trouble for those drawings nowadays. Didn't read the rest of Wolfe until a few years after that. It is definitely the perfect book of my childhood, though.</div>
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<div>Precocious! I was reading Hobbit and LOTR during those years. Didn't discover Wolfe until my late twenties. I would've LOVED New Sun, especially Severian, in my childhood and adolescence. I was greatly enamoured of tough guys with legendary swords. I wish I'd discovered it shortly after LOTR instead of being sidetracked by (*cringes to admit it!*) the interminable world of Dragonlance (of which I can now remember *nothing* but a pair of twins, one a wizard and one a warrior). </div>
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<div>-DOJP</div></div>