skygiants: Sokka from Avatar: the Last Airbender peers through an eyeglass (*peers*)
I have been continuing my read of the Mrs. Pollifax books, which have in their turn been continuing to fill me with delight!

The Elusive Mrs. Pollifax is the one in which Mrs. Pollifax is sent to quietly deliver some passports to help revolutionaries escape from Bulgaria, sort of accidentally ends up rescuing a whole bunch of political prisoners from a HIGHLY GUARDED FACILITY instead, because that's what happens when you send Mrs. Pollifax into a situation and her superiors should know this by now!

Especially entertaining Expandvaguely spoilery factors )

A Palm for Mrs. Pollifax is the one in which Mrs. Pollifax goes to have a nice stay at a health resort and spa in Switzerland in order to locate STOLEN PLUTONIUM, and while she's there she meets a hyperactive child and also a jewel thief who is unrelated to the entire plutonium incident but gets cheerfully blackmailed by Mrs. Pollifax into staying and helping her out anyway, because Mrs. Pollifax never met a Cary Grant expy that she didn't like.

I am sort of torn on the actual plot for this one, because on the one hand it features your standard Fundamentalist Muslim Terrorist from Imaginary Arabic Country, but on the other hand it also features several intelligent, sympathetic and proactive characters from Imaginary Arabic Country who play just as much of a role in thwarting the evil plot as Mrs. Pollifax does, which is at least several steps improved from most plots involving the standard Fundamentalist Muslim Terrorist. Also: Team Mrs. Pollifax, Hyperactive Child, and Jewel Thief is really adorable.

And while I was reading Unlikely Ladies Fight Crime, I thought I might like to reread Lloyd Alexander's Vesper Holly books and picked up The Illyrian Adventure. I had forgotten how much - well, okay. For those who are unfamiliar with the Vesper Holly books, they are narrated by Brinnie, a nice middle-aged Dr. Watson-ish gentleman who has just become the guardian of an independently wealthy orphaned redheaded sixteen-year-old girl who speaks five languages, fires a pistol excellently, and gets into numerous Indiana Jones-ish adventures. They are everything that you would expect.

I can see why I loved Vesper Holly when I was ten! I think perhaps I am slightly too old for the sheer sugar-rush wish-fulfillment that is Vesper Holly now; I find myself identifying much more with Brinnie when he is like "Vesper NO let's please NOT break in to observe THE TOP-SECRET RITUAL, it is RUDE." So I do not think I will be rereading the whole series, and will instead move on to a reread of the Prydain Chronicles, which I have also been meaning to do. But if you do feel like reading some Indiana Jones adventures staring an infallible red-headed teenaged heroine - and sometimes we all get in those moods! - then these are the books for you.
skygiants: a figure in white and a figure in red stand in a courtyard in front of a looming cathedral (cour des miracles)
I am pretty positive that I read Lloyd Alexander's Westmark trilogy - Westmark, The Kestrel and The Beggar Queen - when I was small and reading everything Lloyd Alexander that I could get my hands on, but for some reason they stuck with me not at all at the time and I remembered absolutely nothing about them except that they involved war and street children. So it was a moderate surprise to reread them and find the power of the press, political unrest and uncertainty without easy solutions, and hot revolutionaries! Lloyd Alexander clearly subscribes to the 'your revolution will be much more effective if you are very very pretty' policy, with which none of us can argue.

Seriously, though, they're good books, the latter two especially, and very much foreground the ethical uncertainties that arise in politics and war. Good people can vehemently disagree with each other, and a good person is not necessarily a good ruler. Each book ramps up the complexity from the previous one; 'ousting the evil minister' and 'finding the rightful heir' are not enough to solve the problems of a country. There are definite echoes of the French Revolution throughout, but . . . I don't have a problem with this.

Which is not to say that the books are perfect; Theo, the male lead, is not particularly interesting in and of himself - more like a mirror for what's going on around him - and while Mickle, the female lead, is cool in many ways, she often got rewarded for what I at least thought was pretty irresponsible behavior. (Also I am pretty sure it fails the Bechdel Test.) The supporting cast, though, is fantastic - Colonel Witz! Keller! The river rats!

. . . and, on a totally shallow note, while I will not bookpoll this because I am not sure if enough people have read the books to make creating a poll worthwhile, if anyone has read the books I totally want to challenge you to a round of Cliff, Shag or Marry with Keller, Florian and Justin.

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