Of Wizards, Witches, and Coming Home

Today is one of those bright, gentle, gray summer days I love so much. My chair arrived a day early, so now I’m fully situated at my new desk and feeling very calm & cozy with some vanilla chamomile tea.

When we arrived back yesterday after a weekend of travel, it really felt like coming home. There is a physical and psychological aspect to this, which is that being away for two consecutive weekends helps establish a feeling of belonging, even to a home that is new to me. But those trips away were also spiritually challenging, in different and unexpected ways. Coming home, then, feels more meaningful than just returning from the weekend. My cousin shared the idea that the beginning and end of a “wilderness season” in your life are the times you can expect the most challenge (even attack) to your faith, and I think there is truth in that. I think God is leading me out of my personal wilderness, too.

Speaking of journeys in the wilderness, Mr H (as he shall henceforth be called) has been reading The Hobbit to me. This is my third or fourth encounter with the novel. I read it as a teenager, then again to my brother, and possibly a third time somewhere along the line. I don’t think The Hobbit is entirely the best adventure story; I’ve realized this time around just how much Tolkien rambles throughout the book. And while I love the wizard Gandalf, he isn’t in the book all that much. But it is still fun to read/listen to and brings us a much-needed bit of levity this month. Mr H does the best character voices—in my honest (if biased) opinion, he does a better Gollum voice than Andy Serkis. 😀

On a more somber note, I started reading Lois the Witch (1861) by Elizabeth Gaskell, a novella which Penguin has recently republished in their Penguin Archive series. It is about a young orphan woman who moves from (Old) England to New England during the Salem witch hunt and at some point becomes accused of being a witch. Arthur Miller’s The Crucible left a deep impression on me, and I have been thinking about writing a story that uses a witch hunt as a metaphor, while realizing I ought to read as many existing novels on the topic so as to avoid accidental plagiarism. I wasn’t aware Gaskell had written about this topic, so I was also intrigued to read a British, 19th-century reimagining of the American experience of these events. So far I’m enjoying it a lot—the growing tension and character-building are so good.

I am nearly at the end of Storm as well, so expect a review soon. Next month I plan to give Snow Country by Yasunari Kawabata a try, for an online book club. And I am also reading The Beast in the Jungle by Henry James, a psychological tale which is supposed to be one of the greatest short stories ever written. At some point I really must find another copy of Junger’s On the Marble Cliffs so I can finish it, too. My reading is picking up pace again!



7 responses to “Of Wizards, Witches, and Coming Home”

  1. I would find it so difficult to read The Hobbit now without swerving into the actors’ voices. Ditto Harry Potter. By the way, I finally picked up Man’s Search for Meaning which you’ve long reccommended.

    I am struggling to understand a phrase you used….”gentle summer”. One of these days I should dare tourist crowds and travel during the summer, just to experience one that isn’t harsh, from the four-month siege-by-heat to the constant klaxon of cicadas!

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    1. Oh, is this your first time reading Man’s Search? I could’ve sworn you read it before (might be the Mandela effect). It is so good. I let my brother have my copy, but I might need to acquire another one.

      If you don’t mind a chance of rain, I would highly recommend a summer trip to the Olympic Peninsula in WA, or the Oregon Coast. 🙂 Summer in the UK has very similar weather…

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      1. Well, I’ve heard it quoted and am familiar with some of the ideas, so that may have been part of it.

        The Oregon-Washington border was on my to-do list before COVID: I was working on plans to visit Portland and Seattle during a week’s time, as well as drive the Columbia River area. I still go to that area, but what happened during 2020 put me off EVER going Portland or Seattle until they get their stuff together. I won’t go to any place that tolerates mob terrorism.

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        1. Things have calmed down quite a bit since then, but I get it. You’d be better off going to the coastal towns in Oregon (Lincoln City, Newport, etc). Best scenery & lighthouses, plus they’re an easy drive from PDX and you can avoid Portland proper. My sibs and I did this last year and had a great vacation.

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          1. Thanks! I generally prefer small towns on vacation. I think the only big city I’ve been to on vacation was Albuqerque, and it was unavoidable given my need for an airport and interest in going to Santa Fe.

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  2. I *think* I’ve read The Hobbit twice now as part of my re-read (pre-blog) of LoTR. Not planning on reading it again any time soon.

    I saw one of my local bookshops putting out the Penguin Archive books around a month ago and was immediately intrigued. I saw the complete boxset (all 90 books) for just under £350… but that’s a *bit* more than I’m willing to spend [lol] I did pick up a copy of the Oscar Wilde booklet ‘A Poet Can Survive Everything But a Misprint’. I started dipping into it as I waited for my bus and was chuckling so much I almost missed my ride…….

    How does ‘Mr H’ feel about his nickname? [grin] It’s a *good* one!

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    1. I don’t know if Mr H has read this post yet… it’s a bit of tongue-in-cheek because I am trying to take on his name in various social settings, which was my idea but turning out to be a bit tricky. 🙂

      That Oscar Wilde book sounds delightful! I almost picked up a selection of Van Gogh’s letters, maybe next time.

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Hi, I’m Marian—I talk about classics, history, and other books on this blog, as well as on YouTube.

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