sovay: (Rotwang)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2020-12-16 02:46 am

The endless rain you thought of as your heart

For the sixth night of Hanukkah, my parents gave us a microwave. Considering its predecessor had gotten to the point of needing five or more minutes to warm a bowl of soup and we were becoming more than vaguely concerned about the noises it had taken to making in the process, the new addition is a major gift to our kitchen. We have also confirmed that our toaster oven is not broken: it works just fine when plugged in on its own recognizance, the extension cord required to connect it to the inconveniently located patch-job of a kitchen outlet has just given up the ghost. We should have a replacement by tomorrow before the winter storm moves in.

I was woken on three different occasions by spam calls this morning, including one which tried to persuade me that I needed to give personal information over the phone in order to sign for a package at an address at which I no longer live. I was half-asleep and suspicious and unintentionally but satisfyingly confused the scammer by asking things like "What kind of package?" and receiving the very convincing answer ". . . a small box?" Eventually he abruptly hung up. I have been trying to reestablish something at least resembling a functional sleep schedule ever since the five-day migraine at the end of November and I have no remorse about making things harder for someone who interferes with my sleep, especially when the chances are really good that he wanted my credit card number.

I loved Susanna Clarke's Piranesi (2020), which I read last night on the couch while under a cat. Its puzzle-plot makes it difficult to discuss for people who care about spoilers, but it is full of time and sea and memory and while it is very much its own numinous self, it can also be legitimately read as a remix of most of my favorite parts of C.S. Lewis' The Magician's Nephew (1955)—potentially in continuity with it, depending on how seriously a parenthetical remark is meant to be taken—with influence I am confident identifying from Owen Barfield and would like a double-check on Charles Williams from someone who knows the Inklings better than I do. At one end of its spectrum of genres, it feels at least flavored with Mervyn Peake; at the other, a novel much more like Elizabeth Hand's Hard Light (2016) or M. John Harrison's The Course of the Heart (1992) is just aslant to it. I suspect I would have loved it even if its central setting had not turned out to resemble places I have dreamed, a vast house of monumental stairs and sculptures whose lower levels are filled with ocean and whose upper levels are filled with sky, inhabited to the best of the narrator's knowledge by himself, by the thirteen skeletal dead for whom he cares tenderly, by his twice-weekly companion in the search for the world's lost knowledge, and by uncountable auguries of birds. Without reducing to autobiography or metaphor, it makes a great deal of sense to me as a book that a person would write whose life had been altered irrevocably and nonconsensually, as Clarke's was by chronic fatigue syndrome shortly after the publication of Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell (2004). I would not call it horror. I am glad to know that Clarke has more than the one mode of writing in her and I would be perfectly happy if this one won as many of all the things as her debut. I love its statues and tides.
cmcmck: (Default)

[personal profile] cmcmck 2020-12-16 09:08 am (UTC)(link)
You'll find the more modern microwaves are very efficient- we replaced our old warhorse last year.
thisbluespirit: (reading)

[personal profile] thisbluespirit 2020-12-16 09:26 am (UTC)(link)
as Clarke's was by chronic fatigue syndrome shortly after the publication of Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell (2004).

Oh no! I didn't know that was why she hadn't written any more since.
kate_nepveu: sleeping cat carved in brown wood (Default)

[personal profile] kate_nepveu 2020-12-16 12:17 pm (UTC)(link)

Piranesi: me too.

spam calls: telecommuting makes me amazed at how many we get during the day, as we still have a landline. (Google is pretty good at screening out the ones to my mobile.) curses upon them all.

kitchen appliances: yay!

asakiyume: (miroku)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2020-12-16 02:00 pm (UTC)(link)
OMG I must finish what I have on the dockets *stat* so I can read it. It sounds perfect, and I have loved everything previous that Suzanna Clarke as written, so I have every reason to expect to be satisfied. Beautiful.

it makes a great deal of sense to me as a book that a person would write whose life had been altered irrevocably and nonconsensually, as Clarke's was by chronic fatigue syndrome --yes, I've thought that from the discussion I've heard of it.

PS I loved your unintentional foiling of the spammers--and their lack of imagination. "A small box" pppfft!
Edited 2020-12-16 14:01 (UTC)
troisoiseaux: (Default)

[personal profile] troisoiseaux 2020-12-16 02:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, man, Piranesi is amazing. I gasped out loud at several lines that made me quickly recalibrate what I thought I knew of the plot. I kept getting The Tempest vibes.

Would you recommend The Magician’s Nephew, then? I belatedly dabbled in the Narnia books for the first(ish?) time this year, and liked The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe and Prince Caspian well enough but bounced hard off of The Voyage of the Dawn Treader.
troisoiseaux: (Default)

[personal profile] troisoiseaux 2020-12-16 02:15 pm (UTC)(link)
"A small box" pppfft!

I once got a spam call about my (non-existent) car insurance and blurted out "what's a car?"
asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Default)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2020-12-16 02:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Hah! I bet that shut them up.
moon_custafer: neon cat mask (book asylum)

[personal profile] moon_custafer 2020-12-16 02:48 pm (UTC)(link)
I wouldn’t say I know that much about the Inklings, but I’ve read four of Williams’ novels, so if any of your questions are along the lines of “did this image/plot twist come from Williams” you can try me in DMs.
ashlyme: Picture of me wearing a carnival fox mask (Default)

[personal profile] ashlyme 2020-12-16 05:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Well done on the new microwave! And I love the way you fobbed off the scammer.

I'd wondered what had happened to Clarke since Grace Adieu (which I thought was a great little collection). I can't wait to read Piranesi!
asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Default)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2020-12-16 07:48 pm (UTC)(link)
I wonder if there are any spammers out there who would actually get a kick out of something like that--I kind of hope so? If he gets a chance to try out the story, please report what happens!
moon_custafer: me in Covid mask (mask)

[personal profile] moon_custafer 2020-12-17 12:25 am (UTC)(link)
“Hey man, what’s in the big pink box?”
selkie: (Default)

[personal profile] selkie 2020-12-17 01:50 am (UTC)(link)
So your microwave was quite literally leaking radiation ?
moon_custafer: me in Covid mask (mask)

[personal profile] moon_custafer 2020-12-17 02:03 am (UTC)(link)
“I’ll tell you later.”
ethelmay: (Default)

[personal profile] ethelmay 2020-12-17 07:50 am (UTC)(link)
I am so, so tired of our landline. It coats us forty dollars a month for fuck-all except raising my blood pressure (they could at least throw in caller ID). But my husband insists on keeping it because reasons. I think pretty soon real landline service may get phased out, though, and then maybe he will be persuadable.
ethelmay: (Default)

[personal profile] ethelmay 2020-12-17 07:55 am (UTC)(link)
I did at one time read all of Williams's novels and have two biographies of him. This is not to say that I like or understand his work very well, but I have beaten my head against it at various times for reasons I now find difficult to explain. Anyway I might be able to suss out some related imagery sort of things.
ashlyme: Picture of me wearing a carnival fox mask (Default)

[personal profile] ashlyme 2020-12-18 12:27 am (UTC)(link)
I'll have a look round for you. If I spot a copy, it's yours.
ashlyme: Picture of me wearing a carnival fox mask (Default)

[personal profile] ashlyme 2020-12-18 12:58 pm (UTC)(link)
*hugs* Pleasure. I'll have look around in charity shops for you.
cyphomandra: fractured brooding landscape (Default)

[personal profile] cyphomandra 2020-12-27 11:12 am (UTC)(link)
I just finished Piranesi, which I arranged for my children to give me as a Christmas present, and it’s so lovely, so neatly constructed, kind and terrifying all at once. The ending brought me to tears. While it would be nice to get more work from Clarke I’m reluctant to risk losing pieces of this quality in the trade off (oh, and is the Lewis parenthetical the faun)
cyphomandra: boats in Auckland Harbour. Blue, blocky, cheerful (boats)

[personal profile] cyphomandra 2020-12-29 09:52 am (UTC)(link)
Oh of course! Ketterley family gatherings must be terrifying.

I am considering reading Narnia to my two in the new year but will start them on TLTWATW in the appropriate fashion.
rachelmanija: (Books: old)

[personal profile] rachelmanija 2021-02-05 03:16 am (UTC)(link)
I noticed the name Ketterley, of course, but what was the parenthetical remark?

ETA: Spotted in comments, never mind.
Edited 2021-02-05 03:17 (UTC)
shezan: (Default)

[personal profile] shezan 2021-04-04 06:09 pm (UTC)(link)
I always shoo my cat off the microwave before I cook something in it. Just in case.
asakiyume: created by the ninja girl (Default)

<i>Piranesi</i>

[personal profile] asakiyume 2021-10-03 01:59 am (UTC)(link)
I just finished it. I loved it--especially and mostly and completely, I loved its narrator and his relationship to the House. He was a wonderful, spring-tide full person.

I really appreciated the *heart* in this one, the love. Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell is an astonishing, captivating story, but it doesn't have much tenderness in it--but this one really did. And yet was also breathtaking. Amazing. Am still trying to pull my thoughts together.
asakiyume: (feathers on the line)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2021-10-03 02:03 am (UTC)(link)
YESSS the fox and the squirrels! I loved that touch so much.

Although the House is viewed positively by the narrator, its hugeness and empty-of-living-people-ness also reminded me of the start of The Great Divorce, where the narrator is in an endless, almost-empty city where it's always raining.