more Conspiring
Sep. 9th, 2011 12:07 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Two more reviews came in recently:
Sophie Playle at Doctor Fantastique's Show of Wonders says, "It captures the dualistic spirit of Victorian London and creates an alternative fantastical history that the reader grows to care about just as much, if not more, than the real world it shadows. The rounded characters and intricate plot create an absorbing story."
Steve at Elitist Book Reviews says, "I love how believable her characters are. Everything in this setting is bleak, yet the characters never truly give up hope. They will go to any length to meet their diverse goals."
And I also did an interview on Rachel Ann Hanley's blog, about a whole variety of topics.
Enjoy your weekend!
Sophie Playle at Doctor Fantastique's Show of Wonders says, "It captures the dualistic spirit of Victorian London and creates an alternative fantastical history that the reader grows to care about just as much, if not more, than the real world it shadows. The rounded characters and intricate plot create an absorbing story."
Steve at Elitist Book Reviews says, "I love how believable her characters are. Everything in this setting is bleak, yet the characters never truly give up hope. They will go to any length to meet their diverse goals."
And I also did an interview on Rachel Ann Hanley's blog, about a whole variety of topics.
Enjoy your weekend!
no subject
Date: 2011-09-09 07:44 pm (UTC)::off to Kindle store::
::ka-ching::
no subject
Date: 2011-09-09 09:04 pm (UTC)too much...?
Date: 2011-09-10 12:28 am (UTC)BTW, when you were researching Irish Catholicism, did you think to ask about the Mass? The one Eliza attends sounds way too modern in expectations and behavior. Details upon request here or privately. I don't want to take over the combox nitpicking, when the overall book was very very good, and as soon as I have enough spare change (hopefully end of this month) I'll buy my own.
Re: too much...?
Date: 2011-09-10 12:41 am (UTC)As for the Mass, I'd have to dig out my notes to remember the relevant terms, but I did pinpoint the particular revision of Catholic liturgy they'd be operating under in 1884, and I tried to look for details specific to that iteration. The Catholic who checked such details for me isn't a historian, though (actually, she's an astrophysicist...), so errors may well hsve slipped through.
Re: too much...?
Date: 2011-09-11 04:14 am (UTC)I'm not tSophie Playle, so I'm guessing, but this makes more sense to me than some other ideas.
Seems to me, though, that the logic you used in the novel still applies: Catholic (most effective, Protestant somewhat less, as Michael saw) ritual works against faerie magic, wherever it is, the 'real world' or Faerie.
As for the Mass - most people didn't take Communion in that era- it hadn't been a weekly habit for most lay & religious in centuries.
Eventually, in 1905/6 the then Pope (Pius X, IIRC) started pushing for people to take it more frequently.
Taking it without Confession would not have been done, according to my understanding. And certainly no wine. That's a modern thing, it is only since the 1960s that some Catholic parishes do that.
Not a professional, but read a lot and a practicing Catholic with a liking for history including religious history.
Actually I blame Dan Brown. People kept telling me they'd learned so much from him, and I looked and said but that's all wrong (starting with high art history memories, actually)....So I had to explain, and got into the habit of paying attention to Catholic history and ritual and things.
I'd originally gulped down WFC, and am now rereading more slowly and savoring. It is beautifully constructed, and the awesomeness of the ending is .. AWESOME.
It also occurs to me that finally Francis and Suspiria's construction is such as would have lifted her curse.
Re: too much...?
Date: 2011-09-11 07:47 am (UTC)I knew Communion wasn't a weekly habit, but my understanding was that since so many Catholics (at least in late 19th century England) pretty much only came to church on Easter or the occasional other important day, they usually did take Communion then. Definitely Eliza shouldn't have done it without confession first (which she admits), but Father Tooley -- as evidenced by his behavior later -- tends toward pragmatism, figuring it's better for people to be a less-than-perfect Catholics than to give up on trying at all. (This was partly me working around any errors, I must admit. Easier to handwave a flexible priest than a dogmatic one.)
I, er, didn't know about the wine, though. <headdesk>
Glad you enjoyed the book!
no subject
Date: 2011-09-12 04:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2011-09-12 07:27 pm (UTC)