The play's the thing
Jul. 21st, 2023 10:47 amLast weekend was Readercon! I spent a good chunk of it sitting on the Marriott patio plugging away at the last installment of my Gentlemen Bastards reread, The Republic of Thieves.
This book came out ten years ago, which means it’s been a whole ten years since I read it, which means for like 90% of it I felt like I was reading it for the first time. I remembered it had two storylines, one “present-time” one about an election in Karthain and one flashback one about the teen Bastards joining a theater company. I completely misremembered the ending, except that it was Very Bad for our lead boyos.
Some things have changed in the past ten years that definitely affected my perception of the election-running plot. One is that I got involved in political organizing, rather than just being a very news-houndy hobbyist and telling myself that meant I was Informed, so I had a lot more understanding of what they were doing and sympathy for how much it sucks, even though I don’t do electoral organizing. Another is that I had just recently watched the San Lorenzo episode of Leverage, which was a fun compare-and-contrast (and also made me feel like Locke and Jean were barely rigging this election at all! They were just… running it dirtily!) (this is a bad standard, isn’t it).
Anyway, I don’t have a lot of deep analysis here, not even about the politics of Karthain (I have one joke about Joe Manchin I will refrain from actually making, though). Mostly this book just continues to be a load of fun. It’s got murder and scams and fuckery and a pair of star-crossed lovers who can’t have a normal conversation to save their lives. It has Jean, basically the only character who doesn’t exist to be maximally infuriating to everybody at all times. This is part of the fun.
I have absolutely no idea how Scott Lynch is going to get our boys out of all the trouble they’re in. That’s part of the fun, too.
This book came out ten years ago, which means it’s been a whole ten years since I read it, which means for like 90% of it I felt like I was reading it for the first time. I remembered it had two storylines, one “present-time” one about an election in Karthain and one flashback one about the teen Bastards joining a theater company. I completely misremembered the ending, except that it was Very Bad for our lead boyos.
Some things have changed in the past ten years that definitely affected my perception of the election-running plot. One is that I got involved in political organizing, rather than just being a very news-houndy hobbyist and telling myself that meant I was Informed, so I had a lot more understanding of what they were doing and sympathy for how much it sucks, even though I don’t do electoral organizing. Another is that I had just recently watched the San Lorenzo episode of Leverage, which was a fun compare-and-contrast (and also made me feel like Locke and Jean were barely rigging this election at all! They were just… running it dirtily!) (this is a bad standard, isn’t it).
Anyway, I don’t have a lot of deep analysis here, not even about the politics of Karthain (I have one joke about Joe Manchin I will refrain from actually making, though). Mostly this book just continues to be a load of fun. It’s got murder and scams and fuckery and a pair of star-crossed lovers who can’t have a normal conversation to save their lives. It has Jean, basically the only character who doesn’t exist to be maximally infuriating to everybody at all times. This is part of the fun.
I have absolutely no idea how Scott Lynch is going to get our boys out of all the trouble they’re in. That’s part of the fun, too.