lachrymose

Sunday, 12 June 2005 02:50 pm
freckles_and_doubt: (Default)
[personal profile] freckles_and_doubt
I have quite a lot of private vices unbecoming to an English academic, and have recently discovered a new one: disaster movies. I have a low penchant for disaster movies. Something in me finds it deeply satisfying to watch aliens blow up the White House, or a tidal wave overwhelm Manhattan, or Viggo Mortensen's career take a catastrophic nose-dive in a sandstorm on a piebald horse. It's probably a simple subset of the B-movie weakness, and indicates a basic narrative pleasure in the obvious working out of genre expectations. Next up, I shall dig out The Core, and, recking not the anguished screams of distant astro-physicists, probably enjoy it thoroughly. Wicked me.

This afternoon I put together my last newsletter for our SCA Kingdom. From next weekend, I will no longer be Kingdom Chronicler. Since I've been doing this job - which entails collating and laying out a 24-page newsletter once a month, plus printing and mailing all or some of it - for four years now, I think there's going to be a bit of a gaping void in my life. Just to add to the gaping void already left by the completion of the book review process, that is. I am clearly unfulfilled unless madly busy on something large or ongoing. Sigh. I shall have to start writing the Great South African Fantasy Novel, or something.

I still have the 'flu, and am a disgusting snuffly object. Also, the inside of my skull is buzzing fretfully, as a result of some combination of the exam essays I've just marked on internet eroticism, the myriad cheesy explosions of the second half of Independence Day on TV, and the hot rum toddy hitting the Sinutab. *snuffles off to bed*

Re: Great South African Fantasy Novel

Date: Monday, 13 June 2005 11:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] strawberryfrog.livejournal.com
That raises an interesting point: is Waiting for the Barbarians the great South African existential fantasy novel?

Re: Great South African Fantasy Novel

Date: Monday, 13 June 2005 06:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] extemporanea.livejournal.com
Not according to its author, who doesn't classify fantasy as literature, and therefore refuses to have any of his novels classified as fantasy. The man is notorious for refusing to mark any submissions from his creative writing courses that are anything other than strict realism.

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