Mary Beth is a sister in writing, a member of my local RWA writing group, and the author of Follow Me, everything you know, and the place where she fell. You can find her scribbling about on her website. Always a treat! And that is enough from me. On to Mary Beth's lovely look at being Other. (~Terri-Lynne DeFino)
If you’ve come to the hallowed, virtual halls of Heroines of Fantasy
seeking a festive holiday post all brave in ribbons*, I’m afraid I have to
disappoint you. I have no gingerbread, or mulled wine, or candlelight to offer.
But spice and light and magic aren’t hard to find elsewhere at this time of
year. And hopefully, you’re surrounded by some of those warm, sweet things right
now, wherever you’re sitting. Maybe you’re eating cookies, or drinking
something hot and potent. Or listening to music that erases time. This starlit apex
of midwinter is the season of Cinderella at the ball. We know her. We know who
she is, what she desires, what she’ll achieve. I’m here to talk about the
perspective of the glass slipper. The character at the outskirts of the story.
The person whose perspective is not ours. The Other.
Threading a trail of strange light through Patrick Rothfuss’s The Kingkiller Chronicle (The Name of the Wind and The Wise Man’s Fear) is Auri, a young woman, full of mysteries, who
lives in the Underthing and meets, occasionally but vitally, with the
protagonist/hero Kvothe. We and Kvothe know very little about Auri. She appears
infrequently and is skittish and wary when she does. She doesn’t drive the
story. She doesn’t make a big noise or expand the wider world with
life-changing, soul-touching music. Her presence on the page and in Kvothe’s
life is almost, but not quite, ephemeral.
The Kingkiller Chronicle is a
gorgeous, baroque bestseller with a charismatic, sexy, brilliant, powerful hero
and a complex thrilling world. Lovers of the series (I am one) having been
waiting patiently for the third and final book. While he is hard at work to
finish that book, Patrick Rothfuss has done something else. Something awesome
and brave and amazing. He wrote a short novel, The Slow Regard of Silent Things, sensitively illustrated by Nate
Taylor, all about Auri. The glass slipper of Kvothe’s Cinderella adventure.
If The Slow Regard of Silent
Things did nothing but tell the story of how Auri came to be who she is, it
would little more than an extra treat for Rothfuss lovers. A cool thing to hold
onto while we wait for the last book. A token. Auri is different and hard to
understand, a tiny person with a mysterious past and a more mysterious present
and presence. In a fantasy world populated with numerous variations on the idea
of the Other, Auri stands out as the Other-est. The Slow Regard of Silent Things is
Auri. The book itself is the Other. Like Auri it doesn’t take pity on
you, although it is sympathetic. It doesn’t try to explain, or justify itself.
It doesn’t try to make things easier for you. It is essentially itself, the way
Auri is essentially herself. The way we all are reaching every day to be
ourselves in a world that likes easy, predictable things.
We are not all Cinderellas. Some of us are glass slippers. Some of us
are step-sisters. Some of us are pumpkins that turn into beautiful coaches.
Some of us are lonely princes. All of us are important. And we are all the
Other to someone.
*from A Christmas Carol
6 comments:
I love Rothfuss's prose and wish I could write anything even close to it.
Almost every sentence in THE SLOW REGARD OF SILENT THINGS is astonishing in itself. This book is amazing!
How boring it would be if we were all Cinderellas. Being Other is really being yourself.
I haven't read this series but it sounds amazing. I'll have to look into it.
Wow...now I'm really wanting this book! Thanks so much!
Mary Beth! I received this book for Christmas, and read it in one go yesterday. Have been dipping in and re-reading it on and off all day today. Will most likely do the same again tomorrow. Thank you, so much, for sharing this book with me...
OMG, Christine, isn't it amazing! I kept lifting my head and looking around as if everyone in the room could hear the sentences. Such a beautiful piece of work. I'm so glad you like it!
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