[identity profile] crazyviolin.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] queensthief
I'm back from Sherwood Forest and I was wondering about everyone's take on myths and legends and stuff. What do you think of the stories in The Thief, QoA and KoA because personally I'd love to know more about them and the culture in general. I pretty sure there's might have been a post like this before but that must have been a while ago now.

(And also, on a completely different note that's sort of linked, I love thieves in fiction especially honourable ones, but did Robin Hood exist? I've been converted.)

Date: 1/26/07 06:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] emerald-happy.livejournal.com
Hey, I think I went there when I was about 10! Me and Ro watched the new TV series. Okay, it was a bit rubbish but it gave your brain a rest!

As for your serious question, I need to think about this one.

Date: 1/26/07 06:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mycenaeth.livejournal.com
mmm... I love the Robin Hood stories. And Eddie Izzards interpretation of them in his stand-up. =p

Anyone else here read "The Thief Lord"? That was a pretty good book.

Date: 1/26/07 06:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rowana.livejournal.com
*has never been to Sherwood Forest but has resolved to wander up there some day*

I loved the stories from all three books. I did notice that they were in much greater abundance in 'The Thief' - Megan seems quite fond of writing them, and they are lovely to read. I particularly liked the one in QoA, that Eddis tells to the Magus.

Date: 1/26/07 07:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] philia-fan.livejournal.com
I love the stories. As I've commented elsewhere, I think they're partly there to show us that Eugenides himself is destined to be a legend -- in The Thief was see how parts of his adventures parallel his namesake's. The one about Hesphestia, and the one about getting hit on the head with the amphora, though -- those are just fabulous stories, no matter how you look at them. But I am really a mythology nut, so I love all of them.
And I also love that the author can take the time, right in the middle of the action, to say, okay, I'm going to tell you another story now -- without losing us, or losing the pace.
For those who occasionally read grown-up books (Now and then I've been known to do this), another author who does this is Jeanette Winterson. She'll be in the middle of her plot, and then she'll say, out of the blue, "Let me tell you about the twelve dancing princesses."

ausome

Date: 1/27/07 05:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dgfduck.livejournal.com
I think Turner's gods are fascinating. They're not like the bozo actual greek gods who just go around having illegitimate children, they walk the earth doing all these cool and violent things to each other. And the names...Eugenides is a perfect god name, you know?
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