Showing posts with label Robin McKinley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robin McKinley. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Fav ReRead w/ meandering thoughts on: Sunshine by @RobinMcKinley

The very best stories are different when you re-read them. The thrill of anticipation and the fear of what will happen next are (somewhat) shoved aside to make way for things like Writing Style, Complexity of Plot, Muli-level Characters.

Sunshine
2008 Paperback. Chained to the wall where it all starts.

Sunshine
by Robin McKinley

Robin McKinley's writing style is a little tricky to read quickly, anyway, but her stories are complicated enough and the danger is so real and BIG that I always want to. (Read quickly.) Even this pass, my 4th or 5th re-read of Sunshine, found me squirming to skip ahead a paragraph or two in places. Sometimes I went back to enjoy every delicious word and sometimes I shrugged and leaped ahead further.

One of the items I love in this story is how Rae has two loves, maybe a little like Aerin in The Hero and the Crown. She has one love that grounds her and is too nice to not love and one love that is completely impossible, incompatible. She dedicated this book:

"To Peter,
my Mel and my Con wrapped up in one (slightly untidy) package. 
Hey, am I lucky or what?"
Of course, she is lucky to have them both in one person... I say "is", present-tense, even though Peter has recently passed on. Present tense because he lives on in stories like Sunshine or in memories, if you don't believe in the after-life, which, God-fearing, fantasy-lover that I am, I most definitely do.

Sunshine
2003 Hardcover

When Rae loves Constantine, it's a Beauty-and-the-Beast scenario at its finest. The beast, in this case, is not lovable and often Rae/Sunshine startles when she sees him do something very vampire-like. It creeps her out and it's so realistic. I love every scene between the two of them most. The push-pull dynamic of how they learn about each other and accept each other (or are repelled by each other) is amazing.

I should say something about Mel, I suppose. He's a cool "bad boy" biker with wizard-y tattoos and secrets he never shares. He's far from boring, but next to Con, he's a cute bunny rabbit.

Sunshine
2010 Paperback

Rae Seddon, known to all as "Sunshine", is all kinds of complicated. Her passage to self-discovery starts in Sunshine and is quite harrowing. She has so much more to learn about herself and her family and all her acquaintances, family and friends.  Maybe that is what makes this book so awesome... 400 pages is an introduction to a whole new world with a lifetime left to the imagination. It ends satisfyingly like only Robin McKinley can do it, a colossal grand finale. But the end is not The End... it's more like "And that is how this super-famous person you've heard so much about had her beginning", or something.

This is partly because so many things are left unfinished. Maybe they're little things, but still. Does her eyesight settle? Does she learn to use her new vision or does she figure out how to tune it out?  I say she learns to use it, like recognizing demons and everything else, 'cause that's so cool. There's her job at Charlie's and everyone she'll see in the morning. How much will she share and how much will she not share?  I say she finds some way to share a little extra with Mel and the weres that regularly eat there, like Maud! And she works with the SOFs more and learns how to coordinate with Pat and the other good (blue) guys. I'm not sure whether I want the goddess of pain to be promoted out of town or not, she's so deliciously rotten. I think Con should remain a secret, though. Maybe they could use Sunshine's magical inheritance as a cover for Con's help in finding and destroying the darkness that will take over the world in less than 100 years.

Sunshine
2014 Kindle

One thing I never accepted in the first 4 times I read the book is that Sunshine is not just the ante-vampire, she acquires darkness, a dark-self. I love it when she describes her self-awareness moments:
My sunshine self, my tree self, my deer self.... my dark self.
I accepted how wrong and twisted "dark" is, how vampire-ish and how anti-human-ish, but I somehow missed how Sunshine recognized a dark aspect of herself that was wrong to that same degree. *shiver*  The idea is so big, really. The concept of seeing myself and the parts of me that are NOT OK and recognize them as my own without being able to make them Ok.

I can just feel the deep breath, inner-alignment of multiple aspects of self. It makes me want to know what bits would be me and wonder whether I could accept darkness in myself as part of what makes me... me and able to do everything I need to do. The question is a big one after reading Sunshine and feeling how dark and wrong the darkness is. I'm not sure I'm grown up enough to do that, yet.

Sunshine
Paperback 2003 showing THE house at the lake. Yikes!

Of course, all of these covers fit the story very well, but my favorite is the paperback listed first. That's what my well-worn copy that I keep as a treasure on my shelf looks like. And I don't wait for sick days to re-read it, like Rae saves her favorite worn paperbacks.

This re-read was prompted by Sunbolt by Intisar Khanani. The scene where Hitomi is chained inside a tower room with a Breather (who is worse than a vampire or almost as bad as Robin McKinley's vampires) and how she discovers her own magic to escape and how the Breather reacts to being rescued... oh yes, it was sweet enough and close enough to Sunshine to have to stop everything and go back to where I felt that way first.


Thursday, November 1, 2012

Thanks for the Books Hop - I'm glad you asked!

Which faerytale retelling is my all-time favorite you ask?

What a great question!!

thanksforthebookshopbutton Thanks for the Books   Giveaway Hop

I am a long time fan of author Robin McKinley. I have read many of her books over and over. You know how some authors write like they are following the thoughts in your head? Seriously spooky.

She has written two retellings of Beauty & the Beast, which, of all the faerytales, is my fav. Beauty is flowy and cute. It dances through the story adding everything that simply must be there and satisfying all my impossible expectations. But Rose Daughter... pricks like a thorn and gets dirt under your mental finger nails. *shiver* I love it. LOVE it.


Rose DaughterIf there is any remote chance that someone has not read Rose Daughter, the only solution is to share my well-loved copy. On the very distant, improbably chance that more than one person has not read Rose Daughter, I shall offer my worn copy in a giveaway. International, of course.

I don't think there is any way I can "review" this book properly. As Kali & I were discussing there are some books that you love so much you don't want to know if anyone else disagrees. I will give you one warning: Do not tell me if you don't like this book. We will have a problem. There are too many wonderful books out there to argue over this one... so seriously, zip it.

Do you like Faerytale retellings? 

Do you have a favorite?

International Giveaway. Must be of age to enter with a physical address. This is a used book from my personal bookshelf, read by me. (It smells so very bookishly wonderful!) See all my rules under the About tab above.

Catch the other Hoppers HERE... or visit another blog on the hop HERE.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Friday, October 12, 2012

Faerytale Friday - Herme the Hunter

Moonlit, Provence  -  photo via bonnie
Come on in...

Faerytale Friday has roots beyond my lil' blog... most recently Amber @ Down the Rabbit Hole, but also Jaded Little Girl, who is rather busy oversees at the moment and all sorts of other people that are Google-able who I had no idea started this thing that has such a fine ring to it. I give 'em all credit as I happily go about my way discussing Faerytales on Fridays. :-D

I recently saw this picture on Pinterest and started tracking down this story...

Herne

Herne the Hunter

What an intriguing name, story, picture...

According to Wikipedia, he's a very old legend. Shakespeare wrote of him as a ghost:
Sometime a keeper here in Windsor Forest,
Doth all the winter-time, at still midnight,
Walk round about an oak, with great ragg'd horns;
And there he blasts the tree, and takes the cattle,
And makes milch-kine yield blood, and shakes a chain
In a most hideous and dreadful manner.
You have heard of such a spirit, and well you know
The superstitious idle-headed eld
Receiv'd, and did deliver to our age,
This tale of Herne the Hunter for a truth.
— William Shakespeare, The Merry Wives of Windsor
I've read of him... or something like him... in Robin McKinley's short story & Paksenarrion - which is more of a religious sect than a stagman, but it's sort of similar.

A Knot in the Grain: And Other Stories  The Deed of Paksenarrion (The Deed of Paksenarrion, #1-3)

Both of these stories have instilled in me an awe. There is something fearful, mysterious & powerful about Herme the Hunter. The short story of Ruen, however, makes me feel like there is love hidden here.
Ruen. A princess whose uncle leaves her deep in a cave to die at the hands of a stagman. But when she meets the stagman at last, Ruen discovers fate has a few surprises in store for her.
It's a bittersweet story. The stagman changes her, and her heart belongs to him forever in a rather achingly beautiful way. With that in mind... I hunt down some pictures...

1 - Possibly tribal, definitely of unknown background.

Herne

2 - Unparalleled Warrior



3 - Spooky enough for October

Herne.

4 - Of ancient tradition


5 - Lord over wild forest depths

Herne the Hunter

6 - A changeling?

dreamsinthyme:    Cenunnos ~ Herne ~ The Horned God

7 - Tamed by love?

Herne. Cernunnos. The White Hart.

Herme the Hunter is mysterious enough to attract some wild artists & creative minds. I've shared G-Rated stuff that sparks my imagination. Click on any pic to follow it to it's source thru Pinterest or whatever. As always... if you're on Pinterest, do let me know so I can follow you!!

Which picture intrigues you the most?

Thursday, November 3, 2011

I am Grateful for 2 Things Today (for starters)



#1 - This incredible Giveaway. Beth Revis went all out on this one... signed books and swag.
To enter we need to share the book we're most grateful for, which is

#2 - The Blue Sword by Robin McKinley
This is the book that gave me courage to face the unknown, to be accept being me and dream as big as I dared, AND wait for a "great" husband. It has everything a girl could want:  a gorgeous horse, an impossible situation and plenty of courage. (And really long hair.)
(As for the obscure November Meme I found randomly... I've read this book WELL over 3 times.)

(I grabbed some Fav's off the shelf)

It's really, really hard to stop at one book or Favorite Series... I loved the Narnia books. I gave a speech in 9th grade about my "vacation" to Narnia. But that led me to The Princess and the Goblin & The Princess and Curdie. Talk about a TREASURE! (Um... not as in "Disney", either.)  I read most of the Silver Brumby books, too, if I go back further.  :-)  If I don't stop, I'll keep going all day.....