I still feel the heat, but you've not come back yet from Watling Street
It took all week, but I finally slept. The afternoon is full of brilliant sunshine which I am about to head out into. I am observing the boycott because I see no reason not to.
I had not re-read Tanith Lee's A Heroine of the World (1989) in at least a decade. All of the air still goes out of the tires of the second half for no obviously necessary reason, but I still enjoy the intricate jewelry of the first half and this time around discovered after a few chapters that Martin Jarvis had unexpectedly cast himself as the romantic antihero, the blond-maned, bitterly charming and compromised Thenser Zavion. I have no evidence that Lee had him in mind for the part. She was relatively open about her appropriation of actors for her characters, most famously Paul Darrow in Kill the Dead (1980), although she warned in the introduction to the 2013 reprint of that novel that "I think actually only Vivien Leigh, Elizabeth Taylor, and Jacqueline Pearce remained exactly physically like themselves throughout those several Lee novels they have adorned." But he has canonically a beautiful voice and it took no effort to hear its cast-iron crust after a harrowing duel, coolly deflecting the congratulations due a hero, "I think she thinks, quite rightly, he isn't much of one."
I am charmed that the Trials of Cato's "Bedlam Boys" (2022) establishes its lineage by opening with a distorted, recognizable sample of Steeleye Span.
I had not re-read Tanith Lee's A Heroine of the World (1989) in at least a decade. All of the air still goes out of the tires of the second half for no obviously necessary reason, but I still enjoy the intricate jewelry of the first half and this time around discovered after a few chapters that Martin Jarvis had unexpectedly cast himself as the romantic antihero, the blond-maned, bitterly charming and compromised Thenser Zavion. I have no evidence that Lee had him in mind for the part. She was relatively open about her appropriation of actors for her characters, most famously Paul Darrow in Kill the Dead (1980), although she warned in the introduction to the 2013 reprint of that novel that "I think actually only Vivien Leigh, Elizabeth Taylor, and Jacqueline Pearce remained exactly physically like themselves throughout those several Lee novels they have adorned." But he has canonically a beautiful voice and it took no effort to hear its cast-iron crust after a harrowing duel, coolly deflecting the congratulations due a hero, "I think she thinks, quite rightly, he isn't much of one."
I am charmed that the Trials of Cato's "Bedlam Boys" (2022) establishes its lineage by opening with a distorted, recognizable sample of Steeleye Span.

no subject
<3
I really loved one book of hers, so she's one of those authors I definitely will try more of when and if it becomes easier for me.
I've wanted to see her B7 episodes for over a quarter of a century! I should just watch them and catch up with the rest of the series when and as I can. I could possibly tell you then which of her stories they resemble.
Oh, that's weird! I was convinced we'd had a conversation about you watching them both at some point a year or so ago, Sarcophagus first, and then Sand. And then were going to, or did watch "The Way Back." Which, clearly not, then, but I can't think who else I was having that conversation with! Maybe I dreamed it. (I have done that before and not quite realised because it was something very typical like this. Or of course, it's a Time thing, in which case, you are going to enjoy them both, but fail to get very far with the series. omg, if I did, I'm having words with my subconscious!!)
Please keep me posted. I should hope they will imprint on Martin Jarvis.
I will!
The audio quality sounds as though it was taped off the air through a sponge, but he's terrific in it.
You probably need that filter for stopping him eating the microphone. XD (I've listened to all of Kaldor City! I know!! XD)
no subject
Which one?
(I have done that before and not quite realised because it was something very typical like this. Or of course, it's a Time thing, in which case, you are going to enjoy them both, but fail to get very far with the series. omg, if I did, I'm having words with my subconscious!!)
If it's a Time thing, I don't think it's foreclosed. It's probably just strongest that I watched any B7 at all.
[edit] On that note, have some burninated Peter Cushing sketches.
no subject
Oh, someone worked it out for me a while ago, and I've forgotten again. I think it may have been Wolf Tower or one of that series, but it's very hazy.
If it's a Time thing, I don't think it's foreclosed. It's probably just strongest that I watched any B7 at all.
I've been trying to think if I could have had that conversation with someone else, but my best conclusion is that probably we were talking about the Tanith Lee episodes one time, and then I dreamed a plausible sequel conversation. I'm sure it's not really a time thing! And I hope that should you try, you have more luck with the series itself, but obv I am biased because B7 is one of my all-time fandom faves. (I need a rewatch, but I got stopped in the last one because people (i.e. Jacqueline Pearce and Paul Darrow) kept dying when I was trying to watch "Rumours of Death" and I couldn't go on, but it's also far too good an episode to skip.)
Those Peter Cushing sketches are wonderful!