Jun. 14th, 2012

hawkwing_lb: (Default)
So, last night my good friend [livejournal.com profile] whitewaveraven talked me into going to see the Dublin Shakespeare Festival's performance of "The Indian Tempest," an energetic two-hour version of "The Tempest." Costumed festival promoters were crying the play all day on campus - occasionally complete with hear ye, hear ye! - and one of the lads doing the housekeeping announcement (mobile phones, fire in the temporary open-air theatre set up in Front Square) looked vaguely familiar. [livejournal.com profile] whitewaveraven pointed out that this is probably because I'd seen him as Joffrey.

I have in general mixed feelings about the production, but the audience responded with foot-stamping and much applause upon its conclusion, drawing the actors back for a musical number.




Books 2012: 99-105


99. Phyllis Ann Karr, Frostflower and Windbourne. Wildside Press, 1982.

An interesting, if quiet, fantasy adventure. Recommended.


100. Caitlin Brennan, The Mountain's Call. Luna, 2004. Ebook.

I could have done without the rape. And the incomplete rape. And the rampant cultural sexism. And the odd-sided both of these men are bad for you not-a-love-triangle. Not for me, this book. NOT FOR ME.


101-104. Cate Culpepper, The Clinic, Battle for Tristaine, Tristaine Rises and Queens of Tristaine. Bold Strokes Books, various dates. Ebooks.

My not-so-secret vice, lesbian fantasy romance. The world-building is inconsistent and some of the characterisation - particularly of the antagonists - is baaaaad in a hilarious way. Actually, in general they're hilarious, and the first book in particular has a weird BDSM vibe in it. But so very amusing.

(Romance without men. It's refreshing.)


nonfiction

105. Mark Mazower, Inside Hitler's Greece: The Experience of Occupation, 1941-1944. Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 2001. First published 1993.

Humanitarian considerations of any kind are a crime against the German nation. - Field Marshal Keitel, 16 December 1942.

Perhaps 40,000 people died of famine in the Athens-Piraeus conurbation following October 1941. The Red Cross estimated that 250,000 people in Greece died directly or indirectly of famine between 1941 and 1943. Even leaving aside deaths from the andartiko - the guerrilla war in the mountains - and German reprisals, Greece suffered horribly between 1941 and 1944.

Drawing on archival sources and personal letters, diaries etc., and paying attention to the social rather than strictly military dimension of history, Mazower writes a lucid and compelling book. He charts the experience of war and occupation in Greece from the funeral of Venizelos to the opening salvos of the Greek civil war after the German withdrawal in 1944. An immensely readable and informative book, well worth reading.
hawkwing_lb: (Default)
...if not yet mighty.

Rainy day, the roads all but empty of pedestrians, the sea crashing along the shore with a low constant rumble. I ran intervals to the last busstop out of town on the Skerries road and back, four miles or thereabouts in fifty minutes. I am, it must be said, not going to be running any marathons anytime soon. Although it turns out that I can run farther when I sing out loud to myself. Fortunately, due to the aforementioned empty roads, I escaped arrest for crimes against music.

(Seven years on, I still remember the running calls from hockey. Which we only ever used warming up before away matches. One! Two! Three! Four! Kick you out the kitchen door! Ah, such good bloodthirsty times.)

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