vaznetti: (nina)
vaznetti ([personal profile] vaznetti) wrote2003-02-23 06:57 pm
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Re-reading McKillip

I'm an inveterate rereader. As a child, I reread The Lord of the Rings (or substantial chunks of it) at least once a year. Then in high school and college I reread some part of the Lymond Chronicles every year (only occasionally the whole series, but up to four books of it on a regular basis), Now I read Patricia McKillip's Riddle-Master trilogy at least once a year.

Some books are better for re-reading than others. There are some mysteries that I can reread (in particular, Reginald Hill's later works, which practically demand it). Thrillers tend to be written to be read once (usually on an airplane, in my case). I was thinking that the Riddle-Master trilogy is perhaps the ideal material for re-reading, at least for me, because each time I read it I appreciate its depth a little more. I'm not a careful enough reader to pick up on the repetition and variation of elements (the imagery of the sea, or of nightfall, or the language of binding and unbinding) on a first reading. On a reread I can appreciate the way the individual riddles change their meanings as the trilogy progresses, and how that reflects the larger riddle (of Deth and death, "one riddle and one door") which is at the heart of the story. And of course I can better appreciate the little ironies: in Heir of Sea and Fire, Astrin Ymris (usually so perceptive) comments that Morgon must be alive "because [death] isn't the answer he was looking for." The first time I noticed that I laughed--readerly pleasure, again.

And I see them as products of their time: one world built on the ruins of another, the unlimited power which lies at the heart of every thing and the need to bind it. Lines like, "They knew all the languages of the earth, all the laws of its shapes and movement. What happened to them? Did they stumble into the shape of something that had no law but power?" still chill me--surely that shape is "human."

Of course these were books I loved as a child, but as I child I loved them more for their emotional power than for their depth. I loved them for having female characters who actually did things and for a host of interesting minor characters, each with his or her own fascinating story. As a child I understood my own love for the characters better than I understood their love for each other. Now I see that the story sets up certain paradigmatic relationships (the specific nature of love and betrayal, perhaps) which I still seek out in fiction. Would I love the books now if I hadn't loved them then? Probably not. But if I hadn't loved them then I would be a very different reader today.
cofax7: climbing on an abbey wall  (Default)

[personal profile] cofax7 2003-02-23 09:54 pm (UTC)(link)
You inspire me. I've been scouting around for comfort-reading this week ("Moonwise" is many things, but it makes me work too hard to be comfort-reading), and the Riddlemaster trilogy just might be the ticket.

Mmmm, Morgon of Hed. And Rood! And Astrin. So many marvelous characters.

Changeling Sea

[identity profile] aceofkittens.livejournal.com 2003-02-23 10:28 pm (UTC)(link)
You know, I was in the Green Apple a few months ago, and I found the Riddle-master trilogy used. I really wanted to buy it -- it wasn't even that expensive, and it was that same edition as you had that I borrowed. But I just couldn't bring myself to buy it... and I realize that I haven't actually been able to re-read it since I first read it. What stays with me is how I cried like a baby when reading that last book, just the endless, endless weeping.

I don't actually remember the details of these books, though I am sure it would flood right back in again. But I don't think I can handle that much weeping right now. It was bad enough when I reread The Bridge to Terabithia.

I really love The Changeling Sea and The Forgotten Beasts of Eld though. I think I'll re-read one of them tonight!

[identity profile] oracne.livejournal.com 2003-02-24 06:16 am (UTC)(link)
Mmm, the Riddlemaster trilogy. Those books remain my favorites of hers.

I haven't reread them in years, though...maybe not since college. I think it must be time for a reread. Sometimes I wish my "to-be-read" pile wasn't so huge.

[identity profile] fillyjonk.livejournal.com 2003-02-24 11:48 am (UTC)(link)
I find myself rereading Robin MacKinley every year or so. When I'm visiting my childhood library, I never have enough time to get to all the books I want, and the McKillip trilogy would wipe out the possibility of attending to others, too. But you have managed to trigger a real itch, here, so I think I'll go looking the next time I'm in the used bookstore. To contrast with Arthur Koestler, whose world is rather unrelievedly grim.