Text: I love being awesome!Renay ([personal profile] renay) wrote,
@ 2009-09-13 11:33 am UTC
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Entry tags:books, let's get literate! 2009

Why yes, I am about to boggle the world with a positive review!

Let's be honest, though: Howl's Moving Castle was a reread. I picked it up on recommendation of several people (Yati and Mem specifically, I believe) and was underwhelmed. I was pretty disappointed that I didn't love the hell out of the book the first time through. I couldn't even find much to criticize—I was just confused. I had read the book, but I couldn't keep the characters straight, the plot was the worst knot in your laces ever, and I wasn't much crazy about Howl.

(I have always loved Calcifer, though, I'm not even going to lie. I want my own fire demon, uhhh without all the dangerous parts.)

I rarely feel nothing for a book like I did then, the yawning confusion of boredom and "So why is this so well-loved, again?" Perhaps I wasn't in the right place, because I picked this up again looking for something light and fun, fantasy specifically so I could just stop wanting to tear my hair out at all the "ew, cooties!" talk realistic fiction has been serving me on a silver platter amid other rotting indignities foisted upon my gender with no apology (or hand-washing, so great, I probably have the literary version of H1NH now). This was absolutely the book to pick up, I think, because even as this book features Sophie in the role that it does, she's still wonderful.

Sophie lives in the magical kingdom of Ingary, in the town of Market Chipping, working in the family hat shop. As the eldest of three sisters, she doesn't believe she has much future in fortunes, so as her sisters, Lettie and Martha, are sent out into the world to make theirs, Sophie remains working in the shop with her hats and adornments. When she unknowingly insults the Witch of the Waste with the hats she is making, said witch curses her and sets it so she is unable to tell anyone of the ordeal.

So, cursed to live an old lady, Sophie must set out on her own, and stumbles upon Howl's Moving Castle, the home of a terrifying wizard who consumes the hearts of young girls, where she must deal with a womanizing wizard and recalcitrant fire demon, a sometimes-surly teenage magician's apprentice, sisterly concern and bemusement, and a filthy castle where she's not allowed to kill spiders. On top of that, she enters into a bargain to help the fire demon, Calcifer, remove the curse he's under so he'll remove hers, even though they can't talk about their curses at all, in the best magical, brain-bending back-scratching I've ever read.

My issue with this book the first time through is that the plot is sort of complicated and I went in going, "Oh, a romance!" Back in reality, I bought into the press fandom had provided about this book, where I foolishly assumed that it was Howl/Sophie sexy times, candlelight, etc., etc., and don't get me wrong, romance plays a part in this book but it's so much more. It's an adventure, about courage and love and perhaps Fate, but I might be reaching for that. Sophie considers herself dull, but as the story progresses and she interacts with Michael and Howl and Calcifer, it's quite clear that she is a delightful person but has convinced herself that by product of birth, she is lesser—the story gives her a venue to prove herself to herself, not just clean house and fall in love, but to interact in the world in a form that she feels befits her, whereas the Sophie-that-was was shy and afraid, Sophie-the-crone is outspoken and honest.

The writing is very straight-forward and full of humor. I'm a sucker for good dialogue, too, and this book has it in spades, but of course I have dorky humor, so I would crack up at lines like this:


"Have you heard of a land called Wales?" she asked.
"No," said Sophie. "Is it under the sea?"


Shut up, guys! It's funny! Don't judge me! (alskdlajsdd HILARITY)

My only complaint with this book comes in the length, by which I mean, "Hey Jones, you're missing about 100 pages!" and has to do with why the first time through I was downright irate with this book for being so damn confusing. Toward the end, the story skips from a nice, brisk pace to FULL SPEED AHEAD, adding new characters and throwing out resolutions to various plot threads at a rate that had my head spinning and this was my second time through, so I can imagine why I was less than impressed with the resolution the first. Concerning the missing wizard and royalty, a dog and characters who aren't who they seem to be, the last bit of this book was chugging for the finish line in a way I found exhausting, so I generally hand-waved it away and focused on how awesome Sophie was, and how Howl eventually becomes the hero, even though he's clearly not cut out for it at the beginning of the story. I could do much worse than find a book that hits all the high notes of wit and allusion, that mixes fantasy and reality together so well, and includes a romance that is rooted firmly in an understanding of faults, but grows regardless of them. That's a good love story.

Therefore, I can forgive the end of this book for not spending as much time as I would have liked on the 5,000 plot threads, because most of the book is just plain fun and I recommend it for comfort reading. It definitely cheered me up and that's high praise indeed considering how low I was feeling (very). I needed a book that wasn't going to be all SRS BIZNESS and this delivered, which means I should reread every book I've ever felt nothing for and see if I am able to have, if not a better opinion, any opinion at all.

(Doomed.)


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pic#514506

[identity profile] thingsmeanalot.com
2009-09-13 05:19 pm UTC (link)
lol, those lines are funny! I'm glad to hear this cheered you up...DWJ is definitely one of my comfort authors. Can I start an online petition for you to read Fire & Hemlock now? :P Warning: the resolution is also confusing. But it's SO worth it!

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Text: I love being awesome!

[personal profile] renay
2009-09-14 04:11 pm UTC (link)
Do you think I wouldn't immediately rush out...and put this book on my reading list because I'm still under a buying ban? Because you're wrong! Consider it on the list!

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Tuckin' Fypos

[personal profile] jameva
2009-09-13 05:35 pm UTC (link)
I picked up that book because I'd seen and loved the movie adaptation by Miyazaki, but considering all the liberties he took with the plot, I finished it more confused than anything. Then I read it again without trying to find the movie in it and it was pure love. It's become one of those regular re-reads I have sudden urges for. <3

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Text: I love being awesome!

[personal profile] renay
2009-09-14 04:14 pm UTC (link)
Look how much our experiences MATCH, although I read the book, watched the movie, then reread the book and was vastly less confused, because I spent most of my time analyzing what was different between the two and it helped me straighten the book's plot out in my mind.

Have you read any of the sequels/companion books to this one?

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Tuckin' Fypos

[personal profile] jameva
2009-09-15 10:50 pm UTC (link)
Even the movie left me a little confused after the first time, considering Miyazaki's teeny tendency to rush his endings like whoa. I only figured what the hell that prince had to do with anything on my second viewing.^^;

Unfortunately I haven't. Apparently, both House of Many Ways and Castle in the Air are set in the same world as Howl's Moving Castle, but Sophie and Howl are only in HoMW. The other book's just loosely related. Still, I'd try them out regardless, especially HoMW to to see how older!Sophie turned out!

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Chopper

[personal profile] chaosraven
2009-09-13 07:05 pm UTC (link)
And, as far as I know, there are sequels. I can't bring myself to pick them up though because HMC was so perfect and awesome.

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Text: I love being awesome!

[personal profile] renay
2009-09-14 04:14 pm UTC (link)
I'm afraid of I don't read more DWJ I'm going to have people after me. XD

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castle in the air

[personal profile] cumuluscastle
2009-09-13 08:26 pm UTC (link)
It's cool you gave it a second chance and liked it. I think Sophie's a great character too. The story really does speed up a lot at the end. I understand what you mean.

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Text: I love being awesome!

[personal profile] renay
2009-09-14 04:15 pm UTC (link)
I love when you can give a book a second chance and appreciate it when you couldn't the first time. Goes to show how fickle I truly am.

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Flonne squishing Laharl (Disgaea) while waving one arm

[personal profile] yati
2009-09-13 11:07 pm UTC (link)
Oh god the ending. I loved the book, but the ending. It's like DWJ suddenly realised she had a page budget to stick to and crammed everything into those last few chapters. I have the same issue with Fire and Hemlock, even though I like that book, too.

There isn't much of Howl/Sophie sexy times, even in the sequels. Well. More like "books set in the same universe where Howl and Sophie and Calcifer make an appearance" more than actual, direct sequels, though. I prefer HMC over the other two books, mostly because of Sophie.

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Text: I love being awesome!

[personal profile] renay
2009-09-14 04:16 pm UTC (link)
Apparently someone is threatening to start a petition to get me to read Fire and Hemlock, so there's a good chance I'll know what you speak of soon!

Well. That's what we made fandom for—sexytimes. ;)

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Rainbow Dash overcome with excitement (My Little Pony)

[personal profile] karenhealey
2009-09-14 12:39 am UTC (link)
It's weird; I love DWJ, but I often have trouble with her endings. Fire and Hemlock made me go WHAT WHAT WHAT the most. Not because it was plot confusing because I knew how that story was going to end, but because the metaphysical descriptions of what's happening just made no narrative sense to me whatsoever. I had no clue!

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Text: I love being awesome!

[personal profile] renay
2009-09-14 04:17 pm UTC (link)
Man, you guys! Now I totally have to read this book, everyone is mentioning going, "I loved it BUT!" Temptations! ;)

I will reread the end a few times to make sure I don't end up lost.

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Rainbow Dash overcome with excitement (My Little Pony)

[personal profile] karenhealey
2009-09-14 04:18 pm UTC (link)
HAH! GOOD LUCK WITH THAT.

I have read like six Tam Lin retellings, and this is by far the confusingest.

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Text: I love being awesome!

[personal profile] renay
2009-09-14 04:19 pm UTC (link)
I have read NO Tam Lin retellings, or even Tam Lin. So basically what you're saying here is I'm screwed. XD

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Rainbow Dash overcome with excitement (My Little Pony)

[personal profile] karenhealey
2009-09-14 04:20 pm UTC (link)
TINY BIT!

But I have faith that you will deal with it gracefully!

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(Anonymous)
2009-09-14 04:26 am UTC (link)
The FULL SPEED AHEAD thing is a problem I've always thought DWJ has with her endings. It's like she reaches a point where she decides "Okay, I'm tired of this now" and rushes to finish up within two or three chapters so she can move onto something else. I keep reading her books because I love them almost all of the way through, but I inevitably feel disappointed by the speed of the endings even if I'd be fine with the events in them if she'd just slow the pace a little.

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Text: I love being awesome!

[personal profile] renay
2009-09-14 04:18 pm UTC (link)
So the consensus is this! I'll keep it in mind for reading future books by her. I'm not sure I'll care much, because like you I loved the book so much it didn't matter that the ending was on crack. Hearts!

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da - flemeth

[personal profile] owlmoose
2009-09-15 03:37 am UTC (link)
FWIW, I don't remember having that rushed feeling at the end of The Dark Lord of Derkholm, which is my favorite DWJ.

I didn't know Fire & Hemlock was a Tam Lin retelling! *bumps book up list*

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