<table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" border="0" ><tr><td valign="top" style="font: inherit;"><BR><BR>--- On <B>Wed, 12/14/11, Daniel Petersen <I><danielottojackpetersen@gmail.com></I></B> wrote:<BR>
<BLOCKQUOTE style="BORDER-LEFT: rgb(16,16,255) 2px solid; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px"><BR>From: Daniel Petersen <danielottojackpetersen@gmail.com><BR>Subject: Re: (urth) Gummed-Up Works or Got Lives?<BR>To: "The Urth Mailing List" <urth@lists.urth.net><BR>Date: Wednesday, December 14, 2011, 4:57 AM<BR><BR>
<DIV id=yiv1924288069>
<DIV>
<DIV><EM></EM></DIV>Ah, well, here we do get into interesting reader-specific territory. I did indeed read Fifth Head after the solar cycle, so I can't say for sure how I would have perceived it if I'd read it before that. Still, I suspect it would have been a very good starting-point for me in the GW realm for these reader-specific reasons: </DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>1) I generally like traditional SF settings more than heroic fantasy settings (i.e. the futuristic planetary romance of FHoC vs. the prima facie sword and sorcery of BotNS).</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>2) I was hooked by FHoC first and foremost for the (to me) gorgeous writing *style*, the exquisitely crafted syntax and prose itself. It stands out starkly in a sea of 'good-but-not-great-ness'.</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>3) All I need is wonderful storytelling and setting and complexity of themes and I'm deeply happy without needing to 'solve' various material 'riddles' the text throws up - the more philosophical or thematic questions of identity and alienness and cultural anthropology that the book explores (sometimes even by its very *form* - i.e. the second novella written in a totally different mythical or folktale sort of style) just blow my mind and I really don't *ever* need to discover for sure who's who or what's what in that tale. </DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>For other readers I know that indeterminacy would be maddening. I'm fairly sure if I'd read Fifth Head first, I would have been in awe of what was clearly a brilliant writer and would've started hunting down all his stuff. <BR></DIV>
<DIV>I suppose all this just shows our individual intuitions about what to recommend as a first reading of Wolfe are always going to help some and hinder others.</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>-DOJP</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV> </DIV></DIV></BLOCKQUOTE>
<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></td></tr></table>