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selenak: (Richelieu by Lost_Spook)
Hamlet:

Old Hamlet's New Groove: AU in which Claudius got the wrong potion and turned his brother into a swan instead of assassinating him. The rest is most definitely not silence.



Mary Reilly - Valerie Martin):

The Mary Reilly Papers: which takes the novel's conceit of being a genuine found Victorian diary, complete with editorial remark at the end, imagines a current day scholar or several reading said diary, and manages to be hilarious.

Penny Dreadful:

A trial all must undergo: the unexpected friendship between the Creature/John Clare and Vanessa was among my favourite elements in s2 and s3, and this shows said relationship growing between them.


Queen's Gambit:

Your past becomes your present if it's always on your mind: Jolene's story, from her own pov.

Liminal Lens: post canon story about Beth (and Benny) which pulls off the trick of making this chess ignoramus who hasn't finished a single game feel like she gets it, and is captivating to read to boot.


Remains of the Day - Kazuo Ishiguro:

A spot of bother: does the thing I'd have thought impossible if you asked me: the "two characters with repressed feelings for each other have to pretend being married" trope for Mr. Stevens and Miss Kenton, in a historical plausible and ic feeling, satisfying way. I loved it.


Isaac Asimov - Robot Stories

Training Data: sharp and clever and to the point like Susan Calvin herself, with a great robot problem, an excellent Dr. Calvin and a very sympathetic OC.


Sense8:

Serve me the sky tonight: in which, post show, Rajan decides he should woo Wolfgang properly, because the guy deserves some romance in his life. Kala agrees. Sometimes this reader's heart just wants adorable fluff, and this satisfied the need perfectly.


The Three Musketeers (2011 Anderson Movie):

The second certainty in life: in which we read the various replies of the Royal Tax Office to various movie characters. Hysterical, and makes this entire version worth it.
selenak: (Henry and Eleanor by Poisoninjest)
I signed up for [community profile] history_exchange; it has a minimum word count of 500, and I can do that despite rl business. You can sign up here, and the list of nominated historical characters one can write about is here. (I offered the Brontes, Eleanor of Aquitaine, Elizabeth I., Charles II. and Byron.)


And a link:


A great conversation between Neil Gaiman and Kazuo Ishiguro about fantasy, genre, Samurai movies versus Errol Flynn swashbucklers, Stevens the Butler as a monster, and Doctor Who, among other subjects.


And another: Why it's time to let Edward Snowden come home. From my part of the world, Obama's quick embrace of the NSA and all the utter invasion of privacy the Patriot Act granted the government is one of the biggest dissappointments of his presidency, along with the non-closing of Guantanamo and the persecution of whistleblowers (not just Snowden) in general.
selenak: (Library - Kathyh)
Sunday evening I was at the Corine, which is Germany's attempt to make handing out annual awards for books look glamorous. Was amused that while Kazuo Ishiguro was there (because he got an award for best book for Never Let Me Go), all the photographers predictably ignored this awesome writer in favour of, wait for it, not even Diana Gabaldon (who got "best beloved author of the year by the general public") but the actress presenting said award to Ms. Gabaldon and hence sitting next to her. Ishiguro also had an actress as a presenter sitting next to him, but his was Regine Lutz, introduced as "the last living Brecht actor" (err... that's one way to express it), a classy old lady and hence not of interest to photographers, either. Ah, the media.

All in all, the ceremony was well done, with one of the highlights being Klaus Maria Brandauer reading a letter from Mozart as he had won an award for "audiobook of the year" (said audiobook was Brandauer reading a great selection of Mozart's letters, something he also went on tour with). He was in fine form, with his slight Austrian accent just right for Mozart; his presenter, Sir Peter Jonas, started the laudatory speech by remarking that if people thought of Austria's other big export article after Mozart (and the Mozartkugel, aka that bit of chocolate all the tourists buy), they hopefully didn't think of "the governor of California" but of Mr. Brandauer. Here's hoping, though I fear they think of "The Sound of Music", aka the best way to drive Austrians mad first.

Other outstanding moments: Necla Kelek, a Turkish-German author who won for best non fiction, talking about how "Gone With the Wind" and Scarlett O'Hara changed her life as a teenager right along with Alice Schwarzer and discovering feminism. Why Scarlett? Because Scarlett walked out of that hospital and later fought tooth and nail to be never hungry again, which teenage Necla translated at getting what she wanted instead of conforming to traditional expectation.

And: Diana Gabaldon talking about how she got the idea for her Highland-saga. She watched an episode of Dr. Who, saw a Highlander (I went "omg, she must have managed to catch one of those rare ones of the second Doctor! She saw Jamie! I thought Two made it never to American screens and that they started with Four over the ocean?) and got inspired. Despite not being a fan (I read the first book which left me cold and didn't read on), this cracked me up. Clearly, this makes the Second Doctor the inspiration for Claire. *veg*

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