Jack Vance's "Eyes of the Overworld" and how I came to think about it.

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 24

  • @LiminalSpaces03
    @LiminalSpaces03 Месяц назад +3

    great video as always! I've still got my eye open for Dying Earth! I want to find it in the wild!

    • @literallybooks
      @literallybooks  Месяц назад

      Thanks! I wish you luck in your search, and deep pockets. You will need them both!! 🙏🏻😆

  • @urthpainter
    @urthpainter 4 дня назад

    Once one becomes immersed in a Vance book - his dialog, conversations have an entertaining life about them - often from characters one wouldn't expect to be so cultured.

  • @Deep_in_the_Reads
    @Deep_in_the_Reads Месяц назад +1

    Nice review! Your discussion around the main character reminds me of Alex in A Clockwork Orange, especially in the film version which leans a lot more heavily on the idea that Alex is fooling everyone all along, even when he's at his 'low point.' I never understood the idea that protagonists have to be good people to make a book worthwhile; I think a lot more can be said with a flawed character!

  • @Atop77
    @Atop77 Месяц назад +1

    I'm the guy that suggested A Voyage to Arcturus. So cool that you read it! Hopefully you do a video about it as well.
    I haven't read any Jack Vance yet. I plan to. I have The Dying Earth omnibus. And a few other of his books.
    I bet Vance read A Voyage to Arcturus, I know Gene Wolfe did and it influenced The Solar Cycle. Tolkien was a big fan of Voyage as well.
    Maskull does do some nasty stuff and is misogynistic in the novel but he is also sympathetic to characters with no gender and kind at times. I don't think there's any character quite like Maskull. Basically he becomes a new person whenever he goes to a new setting in the book.
    Cugal sounds like he's basically a rapscallion that we're tricked into liking and then begin to hate with time. Sounds more like a real person than Maskull.
    Great video! Love your content dude!

    • @literallybooks
      @literallybooks  Месяц назад +1

      Yep! 😆 A great book. I’m planning to review it but that may not show for a while yet. Massive thanks for the recommendation, It was the push I needed to read Arcturus.

  • @chrisandhongmei
    @chrisandhongmei Месяц назад +1

    Precisely so!

  • @davidcashin1894
    @davidcashin1894 Месяц назад +1

    Always interesting to hear other folks view point on The Dying Earth. I did not enjoy Cudgel as a character, what I enjoy is kharma catching up with him and the fact that all his clever plots only hurt him in the end.

  • @craxanshards3139
    @craxanshards3139 22 дня назад

    Cugel is one of my all time favorite characters.

  • @OmnivorousReader
    @OmnivorousReader 23 дня назад

    Good video. I just generally love Vance's writing but it has been a long time since I read The Dying Earth and I had forgotten about the food wand! I loved that wand... This makes me want to re-read, though I am determined to make Lyonesse my next Vance.

    • @literallybooks
      @literallybooks  22 дня назад +1

      I’ve only read the first Lyonesse book but it was incredibly good.

  • @joeyj6808
    @joeyj6808 10 дней назад

    Cugel is not a hero, by any means. And he wouldn't be Cugel without those (many) deep flaws of character! But he is a major character. And the Dying Earth is a unique character as well as a setting. Jack Vance was a talented writer with an (also) unique vision. I was hooked upon reading my first Vance story at a young age, and have sought out everything I could find of his over the past five (plus) decades. Say what you will, pulp writers didn't lack for word count! I'm sure I'll never find every Vance story by my expiration date.
    I appreciate every opinion on Jack, even when I disagree. It means that the Maestro's Works still live!

  • @seaninflorida9741
    @seaninflorida9741 Месяц назад

    The fact that Vance could write about a complete a-hole like Cugel and still make it entertaining shows just how much of a master Vance was at his craft.

  • @DamnableReverend
    @DamnableReverend Месяц назад +1

    i enjoyed hearing your reflections on Cugel. he is such a terrible person, but I think writing about total assholes has been a great tradition since the earliest days of literature, and Vance is just following that tradition. I recently watched the film version fo night and the City, based on Gerald Kersh's novel of the same name, and reflected on how Harry Fabian in the book is such an utter scumbag with no redeeming features, and yet he's still fun to read about because you want to see what he'll think up next, what wild fantasies he'll spout, or what hot water he'll get into. Cugel is much more charming than harry Fabian, like you said, and maybe it is easy to forget that he's not really redeemable. I would argue though taht most of Vance's characters do talk in that elevated style -- it's one of his trademarks at least in series like this one (not so much in his contemporary mysteries/thrillers of course). What I think happens when we read about Cugel is interesting because we like it both when he is able to figure his way out of a tricky situation, but we also like it when he falls and gets screwed over or hurt, because we know he deserves it. he's a fun character to read about for that reason -- basically anything goes, short of changing the nature of the character himself. Not everyone is into that -- some people demand likeable protagonists, as though these were real people that we would want to be friends with. i never felt that way about books, personally, though. I don't mind spending time with an utter POS so long as the writer can engage me. It's not like I'd enjoy being around them in real life -- but that's what literature is for, in part: For us to be able to vicariously enjoy the kind of crap we wouldn't want to deal with in person.

  • @mattygroves
    @mattygroves Месяц назад +1

    I think Vance enjoyed writing about terrible people, but he surely knew that they were terrible, and believed, or at least hoped, that his readers would know it too.

    • @LordSathar
      @LordSathar Месяц назад +1

      I think it's satire, which was much more common at the time.

    • @literallybooks
      @literallybooks  Месяц назад +1

      I agree. A character like Cugal is much more likely to run afoul of different groups instead of just passing by the way a better person would.
      And since Cugal is terrible we can laugh at his misfortune. If he was good it would be sad or a kind of Job like trial.

  • @LordSathar
    @LordSathar Месяц назад +1

    Cugel is complete satire about how people really are when stripped of pretense.

    • @literallybooks
      @literallybooks  Месяц назад

      I remember reading Wodehouse was an influence/inspiration for Vance. I only read a little Wodehouse but I can see the similarities.

  • @LiminalSpaces03
    @LiminalSpaces03 Месяц назад

    The one Vance book I've read (so not an expert) was very allegorical, so perhaps that was his thing. Maybe he'd view some awful thing in the world and build an entire world (I love his world building) around it and make an anti-hero main character to inhabit it!

    • @literallybooks
      @literallybooks  Месяц назад

      He does have a number of unsavory protagonists scattered around. Cugal is the most fun I know of (a lot of fun) and that made me forget the really bad stuff.
      Allegory feels right to me.
      -Early spoiler-
      The eyes of the overworld themselves are literally rose colored glasses that make everything seem better. The little village that has them is in complete squalor and people there work most of their lives to get a pair. And that’s just one of many such places Cugal goes.

  • @jack_yo
    @jack_yo Месяц назад

    Cugel is no different than anyone else in the Dying Earth. Vance could have chosen any number of characters, and you would have got the same kind of deplorable acts. It's just the nature of the world at the end of times. That's always been my take on the series.

  • @apilgrim8715
    @apilgrim8715 20 дней назад

    Always shooting himself in the foot.