fajrdrako: ([David Tennant])
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Names aren't much matter, unless they're the right name. - Elizabeth Bear, in Ink and Steel
This quote charmed me, because it made me think how many of my heroes use names that are not their own. Sometimes (as with Captain Jack Harkness), these names are more theirs than any other. At other time, the chosen name reveals a facet of the personality that doesn't normally show - say, the young Miles Vorkosigan becoming Admiral Naismith, or the young Francis Crawford becoming Thady Boy Ballagh.

And there are heroes with no name at all, like the Doctor in Doctor Who , or the eponymous hero of Stingray - several layers of irony, there, in a show named after a man with no name but only a symbol.

Sometimes the pseudonym is an irony, such as Aral Vorkosigan being the Butcher of Komarr.

Sometimes the name is a cover whose hidden nuances reveal changes in form and perception to be reveale in a greater truth i a greater name - like Shakespeare's Prince Hal becoming King Henry V, or Meagan Whalen Turner's Gen becoming Eugenides.

And then there's the secret identity - examples where the name is known to the reader or viewer but not the other characters. The interrelationship of Batman and Bruce Wayne, or Spider-Man and Peter Parker - where the one identity hides another. And even cases (again, in comics) where the name is not a secret, but the differences between Gambit and Remy LeBeau (or between Wolverine and Logan) are clear.

Date: 2008-10-18 11:59 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I haven't read Anna Karenina because it sounded depressing. I never got to the end of War and Peace. But I loved Pushkin and I particularly love Dostoevsky, especially Crime and Punishment. (What, and it isn't depressing? Yeah, it is, but it's good.)

Date: 2008-10-18 06:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mmegaera.livejournal.com
Like some folks on the Bujold list, I really try to avoid reading depressing books. I tend in that direction on my own, and I really don't need any further push in that direction [wry g].

Date: 2008-10-18 08:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I find that the interesting thing is that books which depress some people don't depress others, or vice versa. And I find some books depressing that other people don't - for instance, I find The Curse of Chalion hard to read because it reminds me so vividly of feelings I had when depressed. While certain -shall we say, emotionally intense - scenes in Dunnett are my favourite, even though terribly sad things happen in them. It's all different triggers. Maybe the difference is that death, in general, doesn't depress me, but suffering often does.

Date: 2008-10-18 11:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mmegaera.livejournal.com
For me, it's more the mood I'm in when I'm reading it. Reading is sort of like alcohol for me that way -- it tends to magnify whatever mood I'm in. I've learned not to read Memory when I'm depressed, for instance, even though it's my favorite Vorkosiverse book and probably one of my alltime favorite books, because the fact that Miles is pretty much handed something that he happens to excel at exactly when he happens to need distraction from his depression frustrates the heck out of me when I'm sitting there wishing for something to pull me out of mine, with nothing in sight.

Date: 2008-10-21 06:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fajrdrako.livejournal.com
I don't think books or movies usually affect my mood, though I can't handle horror movies at all and occasionally fiction can trigger emotional reactions. More likely, my mood just goes with the flow, in a good way.

There are exceptions - for instance, after seeing the movie The Fisher King I was depressed for days. And Alan Garner can terrify me by just saying "the sky is blue". But usually a book only bothers me if there's something I can relate to unduly.

One of the symptoms of my depression was an inability to read. I was at a pretty low ebb and lost all ability to concentrate on anything. Couldn't watch TV, either.

But The Curse of Chalion triggered bad memories - didn't depress me so much as make me want to run away. I suppose this is, subconsciously, why I haven't read Paladin of Souls beyond the first totally inoffensive page. But I liked The Hallowed Hunt just fine.

Date: 2008-10-21 08:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mmegaera.livejournal.com
I don't do horror books or movies at all because I nightmare very easily, and I don't enjoy nightmares [g]. I've been that way all my life.

I remember sitting through The Fisher King in the theater and being bored to death (I wasn't alone so I couldn't just get up and walk out).

I did walk out on Braveheart. But that was because that movie generated the most intense anger I've ever had at fictional material of any kind. It wasn't just an "oh, god, they've ruined the history," or anything like that. It was just sheer roaring blood-pounding-in-my-ears, "had to sit in my car for a while before I felt safe to drive," wanting-to-slug-something fury. I still don't know why I felt that way about it, but I still feel my blood pressure go up every time I'm reminded of it. Really bizarre.

I read and read and read when I'm depressed. It's one of the few distractions that really works, although as soon as I surface when I finish the book, I'm right back where I was. Kind of the distraction equivalent of Chinese food.

I wish there was some way to get you to read Paladin. For me, it really is by far the best of the three 5GU books, and I would love to know what you think about it.

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