Yeah, so I totally didn't manage a recommendation every day last week, but I'm still plugging along. This time it's Mary Doria Russell's lovely "Jesuits meet aliens" religious SF novel The Sparrow.
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Date: 2008-10-17 11:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-17 11:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-18 12:18 am (UTC)It's all the funnier because I've finally gotten around to picking up a Dorothy Sayers book, and would not be surprised in the slightest to find Sayers was an influence on Dunnett. The description of Lord Peter Wimsey's mother could be ported verbatim onto Sybilla.
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Date: 2008-10-18 12:19 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-18 12:54 am (UTC)Just as soon as I finish the 34 books sitting on my desk.
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Date: 2008-10-18 01:10 am (UTC)Russell appears to follow a series of bright woman authors (Diana Gabaldon, Susan Matthews, and others) who were so taken by Lymond's character torture that they bent stories around a cute guy getting his guts ripped, either physically or metaphorically or both.
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Date: 2008-10-18 02:00 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-19 12:21 am (UTC)Strangely, it wasn't the character torture that reminded me of Lymond -- more Emilio's quasi-manic talent for mimicry, I think. And Anne called forth echoes of Kate.
I don't know about the other authors you named, but I can forgive Russell her echo of the character torture because she understood she needed to bring something of her own to the table -- in this case, the religious angle.
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Date: 2008-10-19 01:46 am (UTC)