Thursday, March 22, 2007

Credits, Rolling!



These are the members of Riddle 47. Left to right we have Dr. Mark, our fearless leader; Brandon, our actual obsessor; Mandy, our leading femnist scholar; Janie, our resident horse lover and psych person; and me, also known as Leslie, the token daydreamer.

These people are brilliant. Heed what they say and ponder it. You can even laugh sometimes--don't worry. They haven't figured out how to kill you with their brains.


...yet...

[Picture by me. I'm also the token doodling fool.]

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

The first shall be last...

Well, I don't think God had procrastination in mind when He wrote that one... but since I was the first to suggest this and the last to post, I thought it an appropriate title.
So I'm finally taking the time to recommend books, since I've been shamed into it. They are all pretty light-hearted, since that's what I'm in the mood for currently.

1. The Prisoner of Zenda. This is a classic gothic romance, and a favorite of mine, but not at all a serious book. If you don't already know the plot, it is as follows: English man (highly superior by nature) travels to foreign country and while walking into the woods, comes face to face with the soon to be crowned king. Astonishingly, they look exactly alike! That night (the eve of his inauguration), the king is kidnapped, so that the evil man next in line for the throne can take over in his absence. Englishman steps in, and is inaugurated under the pretence of actually being the king. Being naturally superior (he is an Englishman, after all), he is a very good king...but will he help restore the throne to the rightful king?

2. The Crocodile in the Sandbank, by Elizabeth Peters. This is the first book in the Amelia Peabody series. The main character, Amelia Peabody is an intrepid, bloomer-wearing, feminism spouting, Victorian Englishwoman who has just inherited a tidy sum of money, and spurning matrimony, decides to travel the world. On the way she picks up a "fallen woman" in Rome and the attracts the attentions of a reanimated mummy in Egypt. The series spoofs all kinds of books, from the detective mystery, to the Victorian comedy of manners, to the Prisoner of Zenda-type romance (in fact, I think in one of the later books, she actually reads the Prisoner of Zenda). Underneath the spoof, however, Elizabeth Peters manages to weave in a lot of the concerns of feminism and postcolonialism, especially in the later books (in fact, the middle couple books in the series are my favorites).

3. Speak. by Laurie Halse Anderson. Ok, so this isn't lighthearted. And you may have all read it already, but I suddenly felt the need to recommend it. This is one of the best adolescent books I have ever read, and if you haven't read it, you need to. It would be diffucult to do justice to the plot in just a little blub, so I'll just let you look it up on amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Speak-Laurie-Halse-Anderson/dp/014131088X/ref=pd_bbs_2/002-9490063-3798440?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1174528455&sr=8-2


Bonus: since I waited so long, I decided to give you a bonus (on a slightly more scholarly level)-- the introduction to Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex. Also, under the topic of medieval stuff, I just finished taking notes from Rape and Ravishment in the Literature of Medieval England, by Corinne Saudners, and it was really interesting, if a bit gruesome.

Sunday, March 18, 2007

You might not run across these...

Three books, not already read or discussed by the R47 crew. Well, here are three you may not have run across: a Swedish novel, a work of theology, and a Lewis novel (OK, we may all have read it--but not discussed it).

Den keltiska ringen by Bjorn Larsson. I read books in Swedish when I can to keep from losing touch with that language. This novel is available in translation, though I have no idea how good the translation is. The novel's narrator is an unrooted Swede who lives alone on a sailboat in a Danish harbor. A chance meeting on a ferry, and unsought custody of a doomed Finnish sailor's log book send Ulf and his loner friend Torben (a bookworm with an interest in all things Celtic) on a dangerous sail across to North Sea into a series of near-fatal encounters with political and religious branches of a pan-Celtic revival. It's a pretty good adventure--pushes the limits of my nautical vocabulary in Swedish, so I'm glad I didn't have to translate it. As I was finishing the book, I caught an article in a Swedish newspaper reporting a resurgence of Scottish separatism. Once gain, fiction is prophetic!

Flame of Love by Clark Pinnock. This book is a theology of the Holy Spirit. I'm glad I read it because it forced me to think about the role of the Spirit in the trinity. It is contains some beautiful articulations of Arminian theology's wide and geneours vision of God's grace. I particularly enjoyed the chapters on Trinity (1) , Creation (2) and (especially) Universality (6).

Until we have faces by C.S. Lewis. So maybe everyone has read it already. I think I had started it a couple of times, but I decided to see it through when I was sick an couple of weeks ago. I'm glad I finished it this time, and find it interesting on a couple of levels. I'm mostly intrigued by Lewis' handling of myth. Someday I would like to read it with a group; the episode where the narrator discovers the shrine to the "newly godded" Psyche would be fun to discuss.

Saturday, March 17, 2007

Three Books...

In response to the challenge, I give three books, with a little explanation for each. I couldn't decide to recommend only fiction or nonfiction, so I gave three books, each in a different category -- one fiction, one theological, and one literary criticism -- all three of which have affected my thinking. Consequently, this is the order in which I first read them.

1) The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand
A novel about a non-conformist architect, this novel follows the protagonist and the main antagonist in their parallel lives. Based mostly on Rand's ideals of Objectivism (her self-made philosophy), this book is a full of story, literary greatness, and provocative concepts to make the reader think.

2) Four Views on Hell edited by William Crockett
Based on Christian views of Hell, this book explores the four major ways of approaching the subject: literal, metaphorical, purgatorial, and conditional. Each chapter is written by the proponent of one of the views, followed by brief responses by each of the other three writers. A good book for anyone interested in Christian theology/philosophy, especially the nature and views of Hell in Christian circles.

3) Anatomy of Criticism: Four Essays by Northrop Frye
Four essays on critical thought, drawing on much previous criticism and the tradition of literary history. These four essays touch on historical, ethical, archetypal, and rhetorical criticism as Frye looks at Western literature as forming one great arc of tradition -- difficult to summarize in short, but worth the read for anyone interested in literary theory.

Friday, March 16, 2007

Leslie goes a-listing!

And thusly our suggestions begin to pour forth. My selection is a combining of a current focus and things that I just happen to think are fabulous that I saw sitting on my school shelf. All three are fiction but highly edifying nonetheless.

First and foremost - The Man Who was Thursday by Gilbert Kieth Chesterton.
Not only does this book have one of the most fabulous titles known to man, it is a fascinatingly twisted mystery that makes you wonder. The dialogue is powerful and do I even have to mention the anarchists?

Suggestion the next - Lillith by George MacDonald.
This is not necessarily an easy read, but more than well worth the time. MacDonald's descriptions are vivid and bring to life his magnificent characters and deeply immerses you in his world. It is fairly clear, I would say, why Lewis (as in C. S.) was attracted to his writing. If you're into theological concepts surrounding prayer or Lillith as Adam's first wife, there is a whole other layer for you to explore.

Last but in no way least - Dracula by Bram Stoker.
I adore this novel. It has been long enough that I don't think I can manage quite to explain how or why, but it is fascinating. Plus, a character in it, bet you cannot guess which one, is based on Vlad the Impaler. How cool is that?

Thar ya be. Happy reading.

Thursday, March 15, 2007

The Book-Hoard

"If we encounter a man of great intellect, we should ask him what books he reads."
~ Ralph Waldo Emerson

Since we are all admitted bibliophiles, I thought that it would be appropriate for our first discussion to be a reading list. ;~)
(This is mostly an excuse for me to add more books to my list...)
So here's the challenge:
List 3 books that you think are highly recommendable. My only stipulations are:
  1. No books you know we've already all read.
  2. No books that we've discussed extensively (in other words, Neil Gaimon is a given. As is Hero with a Thousand Faces).
  3. No repeats (you can second another person's opinion, but you still have to come up with your own list)
I can't wait to see what we come up with! (and now I have to stop avoiding my work...)

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Beoð ge gesunde!

As I write this, our first post, I am merely the scribe among poets; yet I speak for the whole of our group as I present our statement of purpose:
A continuation of the Old English/Old Norse reading group, begun in Autumn, Ano Domini 2005, by a group of scholar-servants at Houghton College, as an effort to prolong our connections after graduation and the parting of our fellowship. The posts on this blog will come mostly from our moments of epiphany and inspiration, as well as the desire to share random knowledge, recommendations, etc.