tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post4033369839412726607..comments2024-03-28T07:57:49.338+00:00Comments on Poul Anderson Appreciation: Oscar WildeKetlanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08588156788583883454noreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post-12485623854216254872015-08-18T15:49:52.568+01:002015-08-18T15:49:52.568+01:00Hi, David!
Thanks for your comments. Yes, I agr...Hi, David! <br /><br />Thanks for your comments. Yes, I agree that a leader sometimes HAS to be hard, even ruthless, if he's to be effective in governing hs country. And it was interesting how Eric Flint said he wanted his time stranded Americans to have a SMART enemy because that would make for more interesting stories.<br /><br />It had been France's fear and dread since at least Francis I's time that SOMEONE would finally firmly unify the German states. A united Germany would have IMMEDIATELY become a powerful rival of France. And the Grantville Americans, appearing as they had in the Franconian region of the Holy Roman Empire, were becoming a nucleus around which a united Germany might arise.<br /><br />What you said about Pope Urban had been noticed by me in THE GALILEO AFFAIR. And THE BAVARIAN CRISIS also interests me. So, I'm not ENTIRELY "turned off" from the "Ring of Fire" series.<br /><br />SeanSean M. Brookshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13973738112230622557noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post-75235247522947861132015-08-18T12:29:25.938+01:002015-08-18T12:29:25.938+01:00Sean, the series in general portrays Richelieu as ...Sean, the series in general portrays Richelieu as an enlightened and pleasant man FOR HIS TIME -- but it needs to also be remembered that he's effectively governing a nation which he intends to make the greatest on Earth ... so he's ruthless when he feels he needs to be, for the benefit of France. <br /><br />Eric Flint said he could easily have written Richelieu as becoming an ally of the people from the future -- but he needed a SMART adversary, or things would be too easy for them.<br /><br />The immediate follow-ons to *Galileo Affair* are *The Cannon Law* and *The Papal Stakes*. They show Pope Urban as a very classy and devout man, trying to work out what's the best and most righteous action for the Church to take. Alas, there ARE characters like Cardinal Borja....David Birrhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08973889429164886381noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post-71840230181078603332015-08-18T08:22:27.981+01:002015-08-18T08:22:27.981+01:00Hi, David!
Alas, I've read only two of the &q...Hi, David!<br /><br />Alas, I've read only two of the "Ring of Fire" books: 1632, and THE GALILEO AFFAIR. The first book rather turned me off from the series because of how I detected an unpleasant strain of anti Catholicism running thru the book. but GALILEO more than made up for that and wiped out the bad taste left by the first book.<br /><br />I do recall, either from 1632 or GALILEO that a more negative view was taken of Cardinal Richelieu than Poul Anderson believed was true. I've not read 1633 so I have not seen the possible reference to Anderson in that book.<br /><br />SeanSean M. Brookshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13973738112230622557noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post-71779754986569009862015-08-17T22:15:00.182+01:002015-08-17T22:15:00.182+01:00Hmmm, I wonder if Eric Flint or David Weber was re...Hmmm, I wonder if Eric Flint or David Weber was referencing that chapter when their book *1633* included a scene of Richelieu with a kitten. David Birrhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08973889429164886381noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post-73999151375772198242015-08-17T15:20:48.094+01:002015-08-17T15:20:48.094+01:00Kaor Paul!
You mentioned how Poul Anderson gave u...Kaor Paul!<br /><br />You mentioned how Poul Anderson gave us several examples of what actual historical persons might have said fictionally. I immediately thought of his shrewd, sympathetic, and historically accurate depiction of Cardinal Richelieu in the chapter found in THE BOAT OF A MILLION YEARS called "The Kitten and the Cardinal."<br /><br />SeanSean M. Brookshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13973738112230622557noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post-72084085219174722632015-08-17T02:01:59.667+01:002015-08-17T02:01:59.667+01:00Drat! I meant to say I've read MARCHING THROU...Drat! I meant to say I've read MARCHING THROUGH GEORGIA at least twice in the first sentence of my previous note, but I omitted it!<br /><br />SeanSean M. Brookshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13973738112230622557noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post-51735838232155457802015-08-17T02:00:38.374+01:002015-08-17T02:00:38.374+01:00Kaor, Paul!
I've read Stirling's MARCHING...Kaor, Paul!<br /><br />I've read Stirling's MARCHING THROUGH GEORGIA at least and I've forgotten the bit about Oscar Wilde and the aphorism he ficntionally said. Frankly, I'm surprised he would settle in the Domination of the Draka, even if it was still, technically, a nominal part of the British Empire at the time. Wilde would seem, in many ways, the kind of man the Draka would heartily despise: bisexual with homosexual tastes, an aesthete, a fop, and in his more serious moments Wilde seems to have evinced a longing for God which led to his deathbed conversion to the Catholic Church.<br /><br />But, I will look up what MARCHING says about Wilde!<br /><br />SeanSean M. Brookshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13973738112230622557noreply@blogger.com