Glad you asked:
Yeah, after a solid spring of nonfiction (math, religion,
Civil and World War), I suddenly find myself jonesing for fantasy fiction. Long, involved, world-creating fantasy
fiction. Reading The Hobbit two weeks ago made me realize this; reading Watership Down now has only cemented
it. So I picked these trio of hefty
paperbacks off the shelf behind me and will hit them all in order from elbow
outward as the summer progresses.
Robert Jordan’s Eye of
the World, the first book of his acclaimed Wheel of Time series (of at least a dozen books, still going
strong, if I remember correctly, a half-decade after the author’s death), is
first on the list. I read it way back in
2000, living expatriotly of sorts down in Maryland . Lots of Tolkien analogousness (to put it
kindly), but it sits kinda fondly in my memory, though I never progressed past
Book I. So, I will give it a
re-read. There were some things I like,
but can’t comment on it just yet as my mind is that proverbial leaking sieve.
Soldier of Sidon by
Gene Wolfe is on the arm because, well, it’s by Gene Wolfe. Dying to read more of his stuff. Why not now?
The book is not of the world-created fantasy fiction per se, but takes
place in ancient Egypt
as imagined by the author. So – what’s
the difference, I ask? We’ll see.
And last, Robert Silverberg’s Majipoor Chronicles. A dozen
or so short stories taking place in his Majipoor world, where his Lord
Valentine book takes place. Or books,
dunno. Just remember reading Lord Valentine’s Castle (though never
finishing it) during one of my week-long solo vacations at my parents’ house in
Lake George during the late-80s. For nostalgia’s sake I want to revisit
it. Plus, Silverberg has a really really
sweet knack for creating intense fantasy worlds.
So there you have
What’s On Deck.
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