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Monday, October 28th, 2013 12:50 am
For Darkness Shows The Stars is a sci-fi YA retelling of Persuasion, and in one sense it’s really good – I finished it in about two days – the characters are likable and the reasons why they made the choices they did are very understandable, as is their estrangement.

HOWEVER, there is this really uncomfortable pro-slavery subtext that I found pretty disturbing. Basically, the world-building sets up different castes of people, one caste of which is mentally disabled and used as the labor force, and one which is in power. Basically, the author legitimized a lot of the lies told about black people during slavery (dumber than white people, unable to be trusted to care for their children, that they like/feel loyalty to their masters) and made them literally true.

I think the author would be appalled to hear this, since a lot of the story is about breaking down this abusive power structure, but, basically, the basic world-building made me really, really uncomfortable.

But this novel did make me pick up the original Persuasion, so I'm reading that.

In other news, I'm in the middle of The Screaming Staircase, by Jonathan Stroud (children fighting ghosts!) and I have a good feeling about that.

Also, reading Wednesday needs to be Reading 'Some Other Day' because I can never actually manage to post a reading update on Wednesday.
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Monday, October 28th, 2013 10:22 pm (UTC)
So, I love Persuasion, and have heard mixed reviews about that adaptation of it (mixed for severall reasons). This just supports my decision not to read it.

But then, I am generally sceptical of most Austen adaptations anyway, and there is so much potential to do Persuasion badly...

I hope you enjoy the original novel though!
Saturday, November 9th, 2013 06:04 am (UTC)
Do you remember why the reviews were mixed? I'm curious what other people's issues were.
Tuesday, November 12th, 2013 03:16 am (UTC)
I checked GoodReads, because I couldn't remember, but basically, the happily ever after felt unearned in the context of the dystopian inequality stuff (haven't read the book, so I can't comment), Mostly though (and the reason I'm not reading it), I have heard that the story doesn't do justice to Wentworth/Anne, for all that plot-wise, it's a fairly faithful retelling. The details/the heart of them just aren't there.

And I heard it from someone whose opinion I trust. That, combined with the fact that I'm generally leery of both Austen adaptations AND dystopian novels in general (though, to be fair, I have heard the dystopian aspects are essentially the best part of the book) means I probably will never read it. I just, I love a lot of Austen, but in particular Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion, so much in their original form that very few adaptations stand up for me. They just don't. (I also love Sense and Sensibility, but for whatever reason, adaptations of that book tend to work better for me. Actually, adaptations of P&P work better for me in general than adaptations of Persuasion. Just because. I can't explain it. Perhaps it's because there's been so many of them that the law of large numbers states that at least a few must be decent. I just, I'm really protective of these books...)