rj_anderson (
rj_anderson) wrote2008-03-18 10:17 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
In Case of Emergency
After giving myself a month off after finishing the revisions of Knife (well, not counting the crash-and-burn I did at the end of February when I was trying to work on Touching Indigo and my brain was having none of it), I resolved to start in on Wayfarer again, and try to reestablish the habit of writing 2-3 hours a day, every day.
The first session today went... not so well. In fact, it was positively depressing. After a while I gave up and tried to read one of the books my editor sent me, but I just wasn't feeling the love. So I turned to one of my favorite comfort reads, Patricia McKillip's The Forgotten Beasts of Eld, and it felt like relaxing into a warm mental bath. Even my tortured inner line-editor shut up after the first few pages.
What are your favorite comfort reads?
The first session today went... not so well. In fact, it was positively depressing. After a while I gave up and tried to read one of the books my editor sent me, but I just wasn't feeling the love. So I turned to one of my favorite comfort reads, Patricia McKillip's The Forgotten Beasts of Eld, and it felt like relaxing into a warm mental bath. Even my tortured inner line-editor shut up after the first few pages.
What are your favorite comfort reads?
Comfort reads?
no subject
A Candle In Her Room, by Ruth M. Arthur--Chick-lit before chick-lit was a genre, involving an evil doll passed down through generations of girls.
Charlotte's Web, which I haven't read in years but which used to be my default when I ran out of things to read (well, that and Little House On Rocky Ridge).
Hmm, apparently my brain defaults to my childhood literature for comfort...Ender's Game, Orson Scott Card, is a quick, ridiculously fun read, and a good book of short stories is always a comfort because it requires so much less commitment. ^_^;;
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
And Lloyd Alexander's Prydain series
no subject
no subject
Barbara Hambly's Darwath and Windrose Chronicles series.
Tea With The Black Dragon by R.A. MacAvoy.
no subject
All Creatures Great and Small (or one of its sequels).
A Jeeves book (take your pick).
Gaudy Night.
no subject
Don't get discouraged. Don't force it. Ease back in. I suspect at this point, the "I have to" urge is becoming A Thing. Don't let it.
no subject
When I'm feeling anxious over stuff I can't control I often retreat to the safe, gentle worlds created by some of my favourite humourists - Patrick McManus, PG Wodehouse and Bob & Ray are especially useful for this. When what I want is a brisk, reassuring voice of good sense, Bill Bryson fits the post.
Or sometimes, weirdly enough, I'll just go on a rampage through my classic mystery favourites, Agatha Christie, Rex Stout and so on. Shoemom theorises that a world in which every problem is tied up with a neat bow is reassuring somehow, and she's probably right.
depend on the comfort required, but...
Connie Willis: To Say Nothing of the Dog. Also, Bellwether. Or, in more serious mode, Passage.
Madeleine L'Engle: A Ring of Endless Light.
Diana Wynne Jones: Dark Lord of Derkholm. And sometimes The Tough Guide to Fantasyland.
no subject
THE FORGOTTEN BEASTS OF ELD was my favorite book in the scifi/fantasty class I took once upon a time, btw :)
Comfort books.
When ill, I tend to revert to childhood.
lurker
no subject
(Anonymous) 2008-03-19 03:49 am (UTC)(link)- Reader Rabbit
http://readerrabbit.blogspot.com
no subject
Dorothy Sayers
Madeleine L'Engle
Fire and Hemlock (Diana Wynne Jones)
The Perilous Gard (Elizabeth Marie Pope)
Narnia
And um...sometimes I go back and reread other people's prepublished books that I can't understand why they haven't been published yet.
no subject
My comfort reads?
"Scout's Progress" by Sharon Lee & Steve Miller has become one of my comfort reads in recent years. I think it pushes many of my favourite buttons:
- the ugly-duckling heroine (shy, low self-esteem, but actually very talented in certain areas)
- the dark-and-brooding hero
- that it is friendshippy before it gets 'shippy
- In Space (as
- it's a trading empire, not a war situation
- a touch of psi
"Paladin of Souls" by Lois McMaster Bujold is one I keep coming back to, partly because I love the idea of a non-young heroine having adventures (and of course, it's Chalion, which has much deep thoughts).
"The Beacon At Alexandria" by Gillian Bradshaw because it has everything: the past as an alien planet, a heroine, a secret identity, doctoring, politics, unrequited love, and a happy ending. Is the best.
I also keep on re-reading her "Island of Ghosts" because I really like the hero in it; a warrior, a leader, who is honourable and true, and intelligent enough to work his way through to honour and truth in a new culture, despite all the dangers and traps around him.
no subject
no subject
I also love Kathleen Korbel's books.
no subject
The Chronicles of Narnia
Amelia Bedelia books (yes, the little kids ones)
David Eddings books
and, not a book, but watching the Princess Bride
(no subject)
no subject
Comfort reads, has to be Carrie Vaughn's Kitty series just now ;)
no subject
I'll also re-read Laurie Colwin's "Shine On, Bright and Dangerous Object," which is heartbreaking and gorgeous, and a select handful of Dick Francis' horseracing mysteries. Of those, I particularly love "Nerve," which I first read when I was 12, and the series written around detective Sid Halley.
no subject
Peter Beagle, "The Last Unicorn."
Christopher Fry, "The Lady's Not For Burning."
no subject
Also Sherlock Holmes; there is no way to maintain an angsty, critical state while reading Doyle's crisp prose.
no subject
Narnia, especially The Voyage of the Dawn Treader and The Horse and His Boy
Practically anything British that's not "litrachur": Sayers, Tolkein, Neil Gaiman, Patricia Wentworth, A.S. Byatt's Possession... The list goes on.
Jim Kjelgaard's dog books
no subject
no subject
My comfort reads are The Last Unicorn, Till We Have Faces, and certain sections of LOTR (Hobbit stuff to cheer me upon, Rohirrim war-cries and death-charges to, as Sarojini Naidu would say, "conquer the sorrow of life with the sorrow of song").
no subject
Tam Lin, by Pamela Dean; Outlander, by Diana Gabaldon, and any of Robert Parker's early Spencer novels. And during hard times, Robin McKinley's Deerskin.
no subject
I have to second A Ring of Endless Light by Madeleine L'Engle. I also always seem to go to I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith.
...And I've just realized that both of those books have aspiring writers as their main characters...hmm...
no subject
It's the same idea with movies. I never watched Titanic, because you know how it ends, and who needs the stress of watching that? My life has enough drama. If I want to relax, I watch relaxing movies: Nacho Libre, Sense and Sensibility, Emma.
I'm a weenie.
(no subject)