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Oct. 11th, 2020 08:47 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
My experience of rereading the Queen's Thief series in preparation for the finale, Return of the Thief:
The Thief - I had forgotten how much I enjoy early Gen narration, this is really fun!
Queen of Attolia - Attolia's stonefacedly adversarial relationship with the gods is suddenly the most interesting part of the series for me
King of Attolia - I love Costis
Conspiracy of Kings - well, I'm glad to have reread this again for the thematic resonance and to remember plot threads that I'm fairly sure will come up again ... where is Costis
Thick as Thieves - friendship ended with Attolian royalty, Costis and Kamet are my best friends now
In retrospect there were advantages and disadvantages to rereading the whole series first ... the advantage is that I could look at, for ex., Conspiracy of Kings and go 'well, I bet Ion Nomenus is gonna show up again!' and then both care and feel smug when he did. The disadvantage is that my heart is still too full of Costis and Kamet to remember how to care about Attolian royalty again ...
In other news, my experience was a little colored by having accidentally seen a fic tagged 'Costis/Kamet,' 'Relius/Teleus,' and 'Canon Queer Character' before getting my copy of the book and thinking to myself "well, if it's the Relius/Teleus that's explicitly textual instead of the Costis/Kamet I am going to be really mad and I am also going to laugh extremely hard." I mean, full respect to Megan, it is top tier trolling to stare me straight in the face and hold up a sign that says "YES I ABSOLUTELY KNOW QUEER PEOPLE EXIST" and then flip it around to show that the back says "I STILL REFUSE TO UNAMBIGUOUSLY CONFIRM THESE ONES, JUST TO SPITE YOU PERSONALLY."
Anyway, as I glumly told
genarti today, unfortunately the end result of this is I can still think of nothing but Costis and Kamet and therefore despite having previously had no plans to do so I am inevitably going to be requesting Return of the Thief: The Costis and Kamet Cut for Yuletide -
genarti: Ah, you are Back On Your Bullshit.
Me: Yes. I am Back On My Bullshit.
But not entirely on my bullshit! I really enjoyed the majority of this book; I truly loved Pheris and his various moral dilemmas and all the Erondites Family Drama. (As I have seen others say, I would definitely be interested to see some writing on the series in general and this book in particular through the disability in kidlit lens.) I am somewhat less interested in late-stage Eugenides blossoming into his full Lymondization. I did not particularly enjoy certain reveals along the lines of, like, like, Eugenides Was So Dangerous He Was Sentenced To Death By The Eddis Council Before The Thief Even Began! Have we not already been told how brilliant and lethal he is enough? Is it really necessary to retroactively stack the deck?
I also wish ... hmm. This is another way in which a reread was possibly a mistake, because I had truly forgotten Attolia's wary mistrust of the gods in Queen and I really miss it especially now that the gods have stopped sending Gen terse messages to stop whining and have started instead reliably showing up for him with personal lightning bolts. For the number of times that people warn each other not to offend the gods throughout these books, none of our protagonists truly ever do, do they? Every time someone makes a difficult and potentially blasphemous choice -- breaking a sacred truce, stealing from Eugenides' altar -- it turns out that the gods were totally fine with it, just this once, because it needed to be done. I do wish the help of the gods had come at a higher cost, that we hadn't quite been done struggling against them yet. But this is mostly me being on my bullshit again, when it comes to wrestling with the gods.
(Actually, a part of me thinks that it might have been more narratively satisfying if Eugenides had in fact died in the pass when the gods were done with him, in balance for the divine finger on his side of the scales through so much of the book and indeed the series. And obviously part of me doesn't, because then the rest of the book would have been everyone else being devastated, and I do love all the characters, I don't wish to see them endlessly sad for the rest of the book. But.)
...all of which I think is going to make me sound more critical of the book than I am actually; I devoured it in a day, I enjoyed doing so very much, and I think, as a book itself and as the conclusion to an incredibly rich series, it's effective! For a peak reading experience I really probably should have saved Thick As Thieves for after, though.
The Thief - I had forgotten how much I enjoy early Gen narration, this is really fun!
Queen of Attolia - Attolia's stonefacedly adversarial relationship with the gods is suddenly the most interesting part of the series for me
King of Attolia - I love Costis
Conspiracy of Kings - well, I'm glad to have reread this again for the thematic resonance and to remember plot threads that I'm fairly sure will come up again ... where is Costis
Thick as Thieves - friendship ended with Attolian royalty, Costis and Kamet are my best friends now
In retrospect there were advantages and disadvantages to rereading the whole series first ... the advantage is that I could look at, for ex., Conspiracy of Kings and go 'well, I bet Ion Nomenus is gonna show up again!' and then both care and feel smug when he did. The disadvantage is that my heart is still too full of Costis and Kamet to remember how to care about Attolian royalty again ...
In other news, my experience was a little colored by having accidentally seen a fic tagged 'Costis/Kamet,' 'Relius/Teleus,' and 'Canon Queer Character' before getting my copy of the book and thinking to myself "well, if it's the Relius/Teleus that's explicitly textual instead of the Costis/Kamet I am going to be really mad and I am also going to laugh extremely hard." I mean, full respect to Megan, it is top tier trolling to stare me straight in the face and hold up a sign that says "YES I ABSOLUTELY KNOW QUEER PEOPLE EXIST" and then flip it around to show that the back says "I STILL REFUSE TO UNAMBIGUOUSLY CONFIRM THESE ONES, JUST TO SPITE YOU PERSONALLY."
Anyway, as I glumly told
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Me: Yes. I am Back On My Bullshit.
But not entirely on my bullshit! I really enjoyed the majority of this book; I truly loved Pheris and his various moral dilemmas and all the Erondites Family Drama. (As I have seen others say, I would definitely be interested to see some writing on the series in general and this book in particular through the disability in kidlit lens.) I am somewhat less interested in late-stage Eugenides blossoming into his full Lymondization. I did not particularly enjoy certain reveals along the lines of, like, like, Eugenides Was So Dangerous He Was Sentenced To Death By The Eddis Council Before The Thief Even Began! Have we not already been told how brilliant and lethal he is enough? Is it really necessary to retroactively stack the deck?
I also wish ... hmm. This is another way in which a reread was possibly a mistake, because I had truly forgotten Attolia's wary mistrust of the gods in Queen and I really miss it especially now that the gods have stopped sending Gen terse messages to stop whining and have started instead reliably showing up for him with personal lightning bolts. For the number of times that people warn each other not to offend the gods throughout these books, none of our protagonists truly ever do, do they? Every time someone makes a difficult and potentially blasphemous choice -- breaking a sacred truce, stealing from Eugenides' altar -- it turns out that the gods were totally fine with it, just this once, because it needed to be done. I do wish the help of the gods had come at a higher cost, that we hadn't quite been done struggling against them yet. But this is mostly me being on my bullshit again, when it comes to wrestling with the gods.
(Actually, a part of me thinks that it might have been more narratively satisfying if Eugenides had in fact died in the pass when the gods were done with him, in balance for the divine finger on his side of the scales through so much of the book and indeed the series. And obviously part of me doesn't, because then the rest of the book would have been everyone else being devastated, and I do love all the characters, I don't wish to see them endlessly sad for the rest of the book. But.)
...all of which I think is going to make me sound more critical of the book than I am actually; I devoured it in a day, I enjoyed doing so very much, and I think, as a book itself and as the conclusion to an incredibly rich series, it's effective! For a peak reading experience I really probably should have saved Thick As Thieves for after, though.
no subject
Date: 2020-10-12 02:33 am (UTC)I regret to inform you that your bullshit is officially called "Judaism."
(no subject)
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Date: 2020-10-12 02:42 am (UTC)I mean also yes Kamet and Costis forever, and I loved Pheris, and I also want that disability meta. But the relationship with the gods was too uncomplicated!
(Although actually I lovvve that this book did not say anything about the nature of Costis and Kamet's relationship other than that they're very important to each other, because I'm actually super into the idea that their life-bonded partnership is platonic (probably this is my unremovable aro-ace goggles but I'm here for it!))
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Date: 2020-10-12 02:43 am (UTC)...I'm also tempted to write Gen and Irene fucking on a couch. because they definitely had sex on that couch.
There are things I'm glad it didn't really touch on; like, I realized that, oh no, we were going to see Irene have her miscarriage based on the timeline, but it wound up being not a big deal.
The gods extra meddling was... yeah. That was a thing. I guess I'll buy it from the perspective that some chunk of it is their own survival; are they going to become memories as the peninsula is overrun by Medes and the mountain inevitably erupts? Or are they going to survive by making it clear that you do not fuck with these people?
I, too, did a recent re-read of the whole series, and I hadn't read them all in such a long time, so I was struck by things like just how inconsistent Gen is as a narrator in The Thief, and the fact that he leaves Irene earrings, the same thing he offers his god, and just how much I love that scene where she comes in wearing the earrings but it isn't actually SHOWN for pages and pages. And, of course, everything about Costis, and then everything about Costis and Kamet.
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Date: 2020-10-12 07:47 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2020-10-12 12:59 pm (UTC)I also hope for comments through a disability lens! Nothing jumped out at me as capital-P-Problematic regarding Pheris on my first read, but I'm extremely aware that I'm still unlearning ableist thinking.
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Date: 2020-10-12 01:03 pm (UTC)Also, gods help those who help themselves. I am sure that Gen laid some fuses in the right place so all Eugenides had to do was drop a spark.
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Date: 2020-10-12 07:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-10-12 10:20 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2020-10-13 10:48 am (UTC)I also hated the Eddisian council decision retcon – I know it's not a retcon exactly but I'm mad about it so I'll call in a retcon – it was so unnecessary! It truly did not add anything!!!
(I still loved the book, I'm just – my brain feels like my skull is full of sea foam and MWT shook it firmly for several hours, and the most distinct thoughts right now are complaints)
For that matter I'm still weirded out by the volcano prophecy bit – it dangles weirdly in the story.
I feel bad about yelling about this book I really enjoyed and happily spent half of today devouring, so: while I thought her monarch quartet scenes got too goofy at several points, the part where Eugenides scales the wall in a rage and joke-threatens to pull Sounis out of the window was perfect. Also, while I'm going to waffle for a while about her choice of narrator (I feel like her previous ones did a better job of being in the story proper as well as conveying it – I suppose not Costis, but I started my rereads at book 4 to prep for book 6 and don't remember clearly), he really does feel like the perfect fit in some ways. And there's nothing more precious than a curious child in a premodern society learning about the Fibonacci sequence.
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Date: 2020-10-13 06:38 pm (UTC)Some parts made me roll my eyes like the council condemning Gen before The Thief. So did they ever rescind the order? He brought back Hamiathes gift so all is well now?
I was unhappy with the let's-beat-on-Gen thing by the Eddisians. Did Helen ever have to go through this? Ugh. Just ugh. I have a similar scene in Porco Rosso, but otherwise love that movie.
There's been some discussion on the disability representation/issues on a Queen's Thief Discord server. I'm probably giving y'all the wrong link but: https://discord.com/channels/616403451949088789/616403452465250313
I'm sorry but I don't remember where the thread was.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2020-10-14 01:47 pm (UTC)I KNOW.
I do wish the help of the gods had come at a higher cost, that we hadn't quite been done struggling against them yet.
Agreed. I liked where we ended with the gods, but I wish that there had been a bit more struggling (and at least one god offense!) before reaching that ending.
(Actually, a part of me thinks that it might have been more narratively satisfying if Eugenides had in fact died in the pass when the gods were done with him, in balance for the divine finger on his side of the scales through so much of the book and indeed the series. And obviously part of me doesn't, because then the rest of the book would have been everyone else being devastated, and I do love all the characters, I don't wish to see them endlessly sad for the rest of the book. But.)
This is well taken. I remind myself that this is, ultimately, a YA series and that's a huge part of why she didn't go there.
...all of which I think is going to make me sound more critical of the book than I am actually
I had the same reaction! I enjoyed it! I thought it was good! But somehow the things I'm thinking about the most are the weaknesses in the book, which I did not anticipate.
(no subject)
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Date: 2020-10-17 05:45 am (UTC)*nods* That reveal about Attolia and the gods in Queen was so good and this book isn't really... like that, is it?
But this is mostly me being on my bullshit again, when it comes to wrestling with the gods.
Can I just say that I really like this line <3
(no subject)
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Date: 2020-10-21 02:47 am (UTC)I'm happy for them that they repelled the Mede and also that they saved Eddis from the volcano. (I don't know if I believe that all the Eddisians will be like "ooh good farmland, time to move!" though. Eddisians seem pretty big on the whole Being From Eddis thing.)
I did NOT see Teleus/Relius coming, I think because I was picturing Teleus as like 35 and Relius as like 65? Which obviously real people sometimes have those relationships, just. Huh. Okay.
War stories are generally not my thing so I was, overall, less into this book than I wanted to be. And while I liked that the answer was "to win a war you need a Thief, not a king," it also aggrandized Gen in ways that probably will be very bad for him, or would have been if his dad hadn't died. Poor war minister dad. :(
...this was kind of like getting the Iliad with Odysseus as the hero. Except afterward he doesn't get ten years of wandering, he goes home and hugs his babies. (Do not get me wrong: I am excited for Eugenia to grow up and be the terror of the court.) That may be where my vague sense of imbalance is coming from. Those the gods love, in Greek epic, do not prosper long. They use you for what they need, and even if you live through it, you're not getting a happily ever after.
(no subject)
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Date: 2020-11-15 09:54 pm (UTC)And the other thing I would say is that in my view the hinge of the whole series really is the first chapter of The Queen of Attolia, when the gods tell Atttolia to nail boards at head height in the wood so that she can catch Eugenides. They don't hesitate to be ruthless when they need to be; Gen even says in this book that he'd have been a totally different man if he hadn't lost his hand, but the gods needed him to be the man he became after he did, and so they didn't hesitate. So the fact that he survives when quite a lot of other people die says to me that it wasn't actually necessary. Thanks to Pheris, he doesn't overreach; he doesn't go too far into self-indulgence either.
I would say the actually authorially indulgent thing is Relius surviving, tbh. And I too appreciated the authorial trolling of Teleus/Relius while refusing to confirm or deny Costis/Kamet, because lol.