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#lud-in-the-mist
fictionadventurer · 3 months
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There is not a single homely thing that, looked at from a certain angle, does not become fairy. Think of the Dapple, or the Dawl, when they roll the sunset towards the east. Think of an autumn wood, or a hawthorn in May. A hawthorn in May — there’s a miracle for you! Who would ever have dreamed that that gnarled stumpy old tree had the power to do that? Well, all these things are familiar sights, but what should we think if never having seen them we read a description of them, or saw them for the first time? A golden river! Flaming trees! Trees that suddenly break into flower! For all we know, it may be Dorimare that is Fairyland to the people across the Debatable Hill
-Lud-in-the-Mist, Hope Mirrlees
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"Reason is only a drug, and its effects cannot be permanent."
Hope Mirrlees, Lud-in-the-mist
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laufire · 3 months
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Yes, the farmer Gibberty had once been a real living man, like himself. And so had millions of others, whose names he had never heard. And one day he himself would be a prisoner, confined between the walls of other people’s memory. And then he would cease even to be that, and become nothing but a few words cut in stone. What would these words be, he wondered.
Lud-in-the-Mist, by Hope Mirrlees.
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mask131 · 1 year
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I am quite surprised the excellent - if not quite bizarre - book “Lud-in-the-Mist” isn’t more known when it comes to “fae stories”. 
I picked it out of curiosity from my local library, and was surprised to find out that Neil Gaiman had written a foreword in this edition celebrating this story as one of the finest fantasy stories in the English language, and one of his top ten favorite books. 
I was even more surprised to learn that the book was released in the 1920s and that, despite frequently searching and looking for fae-related stories, I had never heard of this book or its author until I found it randomly while looking through the fantasy section of the library, stuck in a little corner on the top shelf, right next to the wall. 
And... heck, you learn new things every day: I just discovered, while fact-checking for this post, that “Lud-in-Mist” is currently in the public domain... And has been SINCE THE 1950s!!!!
Why isn’t anybody talking about this book? I don’t know.
Edit/ Correction: Neil Gaiman was kind enough to point out the mistake I made concerning the public domain thing (that’s what happens when you fact-check your post with a quick read of Wikipedia). I’ll copy-paste here the correct info:
Technically it's been public domain since 2021, as it would have been back in copyright following GATT https://everybodyslibraries.com/2021/12/01/coming-soon-to-the-public-domain-in-2022/ (this explains the GATT copyright thing: https://law.marquette.edu/facultyblog/2011/10/one-public-domain-to-rule-them-all/)
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withbriefthanksgiving · 6 months
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Why did she cock her pretty blue eye
At the lad with the silver buckles,
When the penniless lad who was handsome and spry
Got nought but a rap on his knuckles?
—Hope Mirrlees, Lud-in-the-Mist, Chapter XXVII: The Fair in the Elfin Marches
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morgan--reads · 1 year
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Lud-in-the-Mist - Hope Mirrlees
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Summary: Years after fairy fruit and any mention of fairyland has been rendered taboo in the country of Dorimare, the mayor of the capital city, Nathaniel Chanticleer, believes that his son Ranulph has eaten fairy fruit, setting off a strange series of events as Nathaniel attempts to trace the source of the fruit and save his son from sinister forces. 
Quote: “It had generated in him what one can only call a wistful yearning after the prosaic things he already possessed. It was as if he thought he had already lost what he was actually holding in his hands.” 
My rating: 4.0/5.0   Goodreads: 3.87/5.0
Review: This book is older than I thought at first, but it is never stuffy. The tone is lightly humorous, with lots of satire centered around the almost hobbit-like bourgeois people of this fantasy world, but it also has a distinct and thrilling undercurrent of menace to it. The menace seems to be coming from one source in the start, but, in a well-handled switch, turns out to be from another source entirely, keeping the whole story full of intrigue. The grounded intrigue pairs nicely with the more fantastic events and the eerie wonder they generate. The ending is deeply, and appropriately, bittersweet.  
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Finished reading Lud-in-the-Mist. Public domain copy available here. It’s s beautiful and mysterious, but so difficult to explain. I like how it’s so symbolic (like what is fairy fruit and fairy things? drugs, whimsy, medicine, the apple of eden?) but also invites the reader to form their own conclusion. It doesn’t really force you to accept one interpretation or another, but to read through it and decide for yourself. The prose is also so lovely, humorous, but sometimes eerie. 
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gellavonhamster · 2 years
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A house with old furniture has no need of ghosts to be haunted.
Lud-in-the-Mist, Hope Mirrlees 
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easolinas · 1 year
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Review: Lud-in-the-Mist by Hope Mirrlees
Review: Lud-in-the-Mist by Hope Mirrlees
Even though many have tried, only a few fantasy books have the qualities that come naturally to “Lud-In-The-Mist” – a quirky sense of humor, a complicated and timeless plot, and a sense of the ethereally magical that makes you feel like you’re walking on the thin edge between the real and the mystical. And while not as influential as works by the titans of the fantasy genre, Hope Mirrlees’…
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bookcoversonly · 2 years
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Title: Lud-in-the-Mist | Author: Hope Mirrlees | Publisher: Orion Publishing (2018)
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“Having inquired his way to the Gibbertys’ farm, he struck off the high road into the valley — and very lovely it was looking in its autumn coloring. The vintage was over, and the vines were now golden and red. Some of the narrow oblong leaves of the wild cherry had kept their bottle-green, while others, growing on the same twig, had turned to salmon-pink, and the mulberries alternated between canary-yellow and grass-green. The mountain ash had turned a fiery rose (more lovely, even, than had been its scarlet berries) and often an olive grew beside it, as if ready, lovingly, to quench its fire in its own tender grey. The birches twinkled and quivered, as if each branch were a golden divining rod trembling to secret water; and the path was strewn with olives, looking like black oblong dung. “It was one of those mysterious autumn days that are intensely bright though the sun is hidden; and when one looked at these lambent trees one could almost fancy them the source of the light flooding the valley.”
Lud-in-the-Mist
Hope Mirrlees
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haven’t had yelling at the sky annotations in awhile! brought to you by Lud-in-the-Mist
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"as if in sympathy with human things, the days shortening, the trees yellowing, and beginning to shed their leaves."
Lud-in-the-mist - Hope Mirrlees
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laufire · 3 months
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But it was the criminal trials that, in the past, had given Master Nathaniel the keenest pleasure. The dry style of the Law was such a magnificent medium for narrative. And the little details of everyday life, the humble objects of daily use, became so startlingly vivid, when, like scarlet geraniums breaking through a thick autumn mist, they blazed out from that grey style… so vivid, and, often, fraught with such tragic consequences.
Lud-in-the-Mist, by Hope Mirrless.
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ofliterarynature · 26 days
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FEBRUARY 2024 WRAP UP
[loved liked ok nope dnf (reread) book club*]
The Djinn Waits a Hundred Years • The Memory Librarian • Pixels of You* • Arch-Enemies • Moby Dyke • Pip Bartlett’s Guide to Magical Creatures • A Sinister Revenge • Lud in the Mist • Crying in H Mart • Something Close to Magic • Hula • (Renegades) • The Divorce Colony • Foundryside • Earthlings • A Far Wilder Magic
total: 13 books (12 audiobook, 1 print)
Not as many books this month! And not just because February has fewer days, I was really in a funk this month and struggling to pay attention to my audiobooks (and enjoy them). You wouldn't think there's such a thing as too many books, but I think the overtime hours at work are hitting their peak mental health destruction. Here's to hoping things improve in March!
The Divorce Colony (4.5 stars) - genuinely can't believe this was my 3rd nonfic of the year already! I picked a print copy of this up at a library sale in December after hearing about divorce colonies in the early 20th century on a recent episode of the 99% Invisible podcast. Turns out this book was actually about the beginning of the moment that took place in Sioux Falls, South Dakota in the 1800's. Western states had shorter residency periods and less strict divorce laws, so women (and the occasional man) would travel west and live there for several months in order to obtain a divorce. This book tracks the movement through the stories of 4 of the more infamous cases to make the papers, and does an incredible job of weaving in the surrounding political and religious discussions. Would recommend, and has a great cover to boot!
Renegades (3 stars) - a reread, and for some reason it was torture. I originally read this back in 2018 and loved it, and wanted to tackle it again and actually finish the rest of the series. But I kept getting worked up and frustrated this time around! It kept trying to take itself seriously while also being very YA and kind of superhero-camp, and I was absolutely overthinking it lol. I found the strength to press on into book two, Archenemies (3.5 stars). I liked it a bit more! Something about it being new, the story being a bit more settled and maybe getting a better grasp on its message/politics, the characters growing more, me figuring out that I shouldn't listen to the audiobook for more than an hour or so at a time, lmao. Not great, but fun, and possibly worth reading? I'll keep y'all updated when I finish book 3.
Hula (5 stars) - incredible. Part generational family story, part history, part discussion of what it means to be Hawaiian, culturally and legally. Not always the easiest of reads, but it was so so worth it. It was also doing something very interesting with parts of the narration voiced by a collective "we" (culture/community?) that I would love to get a look at in print. Highly recommend, I'll definitely be getting myself a copy.
Something Close to Magic (4.5 stars) - an absolute delight! The Gail Carson Levine comp on this one is not entirely unearned, anyone who's a fan of fairy tale type fantasies will enjoy this, I had a great time! Very interestingly, it has characters who are in their mid to late teens, but is written in a way where they're still allowed to be young, to the point I'm surprised it didn't get shoehorned into MG instead of YA. If the author writes any more of these I'd be happy to read them.
Crying in H Mart (3.5 stars) - nonfic number 4! I'm sure everyone's heard of this one by now, which is why I finally picked it up. It's fine (which is why it got an extra .5 star), but on the scale of take it or leave it, I'd leave it. It just wasn't for me and I kind of wish I'd dnf'd it. A great cover though.
Lud-in-the-Mist (3.5 stars) - this one seems to be considered a sort of early precursor to fantasy and fairy tale type stories from the early 20th century, and I was eager to try it! While I definitely don't think it would feel out of place amongst it's more recent fellows (think the Last Unicorn, Robin McKinley, DWJ, etc), I absolutely could not get into it. Probably the chief recipient of "my brain doesn't want to cooperate, sorry," so maybe I'll give it another shot someday.
A Sinister Revenge (4 stars) - enjoyable as always! Not to hide this deep in my reviews or anything, but have the Emily Wilde people tried Veronica Speedwell yet?
Pip Bartlett's Guide to Magical Creatures (3 stars) - This one's been sitting unread on my shelf for a while, and since I was on a bit of a Maggie Stiefvater run, I figured it was perfect! Well. Unless you are like 7, this was so bad. Not good. Having previously read and not liked a book by Maggie's co-author Jackson Pearce, I think it would not be unreasonable for me to assume she did most of the writing while Maggie did the illustrations - if the audiobook had been any longer than 4 hours I'd have absolutely DNF'd it, and I have no intention of continuing the series.
Moby Dyke: An Obsessive Quest to Track Down the Last Remaining Lesbian Bars in the Country (4.5 stars) - part of me was wondering what I was doing trying this lol, not being someone who drinks or goes to bars, OR, as previously mentioned, is not the biggest fan of memoirs. It was not, as I hoped, also part research project, but it is a travelogue, and as a consequence has a strong narrative thread. It also has a lot of discussions about issues in the LGBTQ+ community, and overall I really liked it once I figured out what it was doing!
Pixels of You (3.5 stars) - a very short sapphic rivals-to friends-to lovers graphic novel about a human-form AI and a human with an android eye competing for a photography internship at an art gallery. The creators clearly put SO much thought into their characters and worldbuilding, but sadly there is nowhere near enough length here to do it all justice, and a number of elements felt very odd or under explored. The relationship parts are great! I just think this needed to be twice as long to really given everything its due, or maybe explored in prose instead.
The Memory Librarian (3.5 stars) - to start, I know nothing about the musical album this is related to, so I don't know how much that might have affected my reading. Overall I wasn't super impressed - when I discovered that the first story was cowritten by Alaya Dawn Johnson - no shade to her - I almost dropped it then, I just really didn't like her writing style in the one book I've read. But I stuck through it. Of the five stories, only one really stuck in my mind - Nevermind, cowritten by Danny Lore, which I could have read an entire novel about. I wish I could recommend it on its own, but overall I just don't quite understand the world Monae has created.
The Djinn Waits a Hundred Years (3.5 stars) - I probably should say more about the book, it was fine, I was surprised to find that it's set in relatively current day, I found myself a lot more interested in the second narrative about the house's history, which did make me cry a bit. Mostly though, I really just want to let you know how MUCH of a non-entity the djinn was in this story, I have no idea why it was there and why it was included in the title of the book. All the author had to do was make the house a little more sentient and haunted and it would be fine, idk. Read it if you want, but it's not one I would rec.
DNF'S
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Foundryside - I was so ready. I had the first two audiobooks checked out, I had the third one on hold. I started this but oh, the writing. bleh. I was looking thought reviews and someone referred to it as something like "21st century internet speak." In a high fantasy novel. I noped out at just 10%.
Earthlings - I've considered the author's other book before but haven't read it, but thought maybe a sci-fic book would work better for me? The beginning was odd but not uninteresting, and I might have continued if it had stayed that way. But then the main character was in school(?) and her teacher started getting handsy after class and I wasn't invested enough to stick it out.
A Far Wilder Magic - the success of Something Close to Magic made me a little too hopeful I think, bc while I'm still a little leery around YA, I know people have liked this. And it sounded interesting, truly, and I love the cover. But first it was the religion stuff. And I didn't really like the characters. Then it's like, oh, this is the same plot as The Scorpio Races, but nowhere near it's quality in any shape or form. I decided to stop while I was ahead, before I started to actually dislike it. (anyway here's your PSA to go read The Scorpio Races by Maggie Stiefvater, I recommend doing it in October if you can).
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withbriefthanksgiving · 7 months
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It was as if the future were a treacly adhesive fluid that had been spilt all over the present, so that everything he touched made his fingers too sticky to be of the slightest use.
—Hope Mirrlees, Lud-in-the-Mist, Chapter IX: Panic and the Silent People
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