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Category Archives: sff
Wearing the Mask
I’m rereading Seneca’s De Beneficiis, using Kaster’s shiny new OCT edition, and came across this crunchy line: hanc personam induisti: agenda est.—Seneca, De Beneficiis 2.17.2“You’ve put on this mask; you have to act out the part.” Seneca’s line is almost … Continue reading
Posted in ancient art, art, language, Rome, sff
Tagged EverythingIsBetterWithLatin!™, masks, theater
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Eldritch Lore of Lightning, Stars, and Magic
On Facebook, Michael Swanwick mentioned a historical (or maybe apocryphal) episode when the Pope invited Etruscan seers to use lightning magic to defend Rome against Alaric and his Ostrogoths. It’s a pretty good story, whether or not it’s actually history. … Continue reading
Posted in academia, Adventures in the Public Domain, astronomy, books, fantasy, history, language, magic, Myth & Legend, Roman history, Rome, science, sff, social media, sword-and-sorcery
Tagged folklore, Greek, Latin
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A Fuzzy Thing Happened…
Typo of the day is trible (where I intended to type tribe). It caused me a little trouble.
Posted in language, sff, television, Typo of the Day, words
Tagged David Gerrold, EverythingIsStarTrek
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“Numberless Are the World’s Wonders…”: Clifford Simak’s CITY
Here’s Davis Meltzer’s cover for the 1970s-era Ace edition of Clifford Simak’s City, an early entry onto my “Always Reread” list. I disliked this cover when I was a kid because of the anthropoid greenmetal skull with human teeth. Now … Continue reading
Posted in books, dogs, fantasy, fantasy art, music, sff
Tagged Clifford Simak, Sophocles
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Napping in the Bookroom
Reuben Sandwich (PhD, DND, CBD, etc.) takes a brief respite from researching heroic fantasy.
Posted in dogs, fantasy, sff, sword-and-sorcery, werewolves
Tagged Reuben Sandwich
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Don’t Put an Otch in My Nadder!
Apparently English notch arises from a word-division error due to the English movable n: it wasn’t originally a notch, it was an otch (cf. French oche “a notch”). So says the AHD and the tyrant OED. This is analogous to … Continue reading
Posted in art, books, fantasy, fantasy art, sff, sword-and-sorcery, words
Tagged E.R. Eddison, Keith Henderson, The Worm Ouroboros
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