Madam, want to talk about author Mary Stewart? discussion
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The Moonspinners -- Chapters 13 thru 16
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Oh dear! It is looking more and more like (view spoiler) . This could get ugly, I'm afraid!
Diane Lynn wrote: "Part way into chapter 14
Oh dear! It is looking more and more like [spoilers removed]. This could get ugly, I'm afraid!"
That's what i'm thinking, too, and then (view spoiler) Ms. Stewart has me totally confused, again!
Oh dear! It is looking more and more like [spoilers removed]. This could get ugly, I'm afraid!"
That's what i'm thinking, too, and then (view spoiler) Ms. Stewart has me totally confused, again!

Oh dear! It is looking more and more like [spoilers removed]. This could get ugly, I'm afraid!"
That's what i'm thinking, too, and then [spoilers remov..."
I was confused too. I kept thinking, good grief what is MS doing. Then I couldn't put it down!
Ashley wrote: "From Chapter 14, this just may be my favorite passage so far:
[spoilers removed]"
She can't catch a break, can she? ;)
[spoilers removed]"
She can't catch a break, can she? ;)
End of Chapter 15 ... I nearly shouted, "What?!" three times in this chapter. Things sure did pick up after (view spoiler) !
I don't want to say anything until you get through chapter 16....
Jeannette wrote: "I don't want to say anything until you get through chapter 16...."
Finished 16. Holy moley! And you're right about Nicola -- she gets it from all sides! (Or two sides, anyway!)
Finished 16. Holy moley! And you're right about Nicola -- she gets it from all sides! (Or two sides, anyway!)
Diane Lynn wrote: "In chapter 16 after ..."
You're right, Diane, (view spoiler) .
Frances shows Stewart's humor at its finest, too -- she's wickedly clever and one of my favorite things about the book. :)
You're right, Diane, (view spoiler) .
Frances shows Stewart's humor at its finest, too -- she's wickedly clever and one of my favorite things about the book. :)



And "the most tolerant person I know". Quite a recommendation, I think. She's not namby-pamby tolerant (calling Tony "Ceddy" just cracks me up), but tolerant in the old-fashioned good way of "what you do with your life is your business". She's someone I'd love to be friends with.

The threads are there, they're just hiding. Click on "Discussions" and then the "Buddy Reads" header and you'll see more topics.

The threads are there, they're just hiding. Click on "Discussions" and then the "Buddy Reads" hea..."
Found them! Apparently I've lost my Goodreads feed, too, since Friday. I'm never sure if it's my internet provider who always manages to mess up my email, or if it's Goodreads. But I'll keep checking back for comments!

And "the most tolerant person I know". Quite a recommendation, I ..."
I didn't get the "Ceddy" reference. Does anyone know what she's talking about?






AKA Langleyensis hirsuta.

AKA Langleyensis hirsuta."
I'm pretty sure we have Langleyensis hirsuta growing here, too. By the way, I'm guessing that the "hirsuta" is a reference to the two-day beard, which is also quite funny!
As far as Tony being gay, I've always thought of him as just being not interested in people, male or female, but being completely self-involved. Nicola describes him as looking at her with a cold eye somewhere towards the end. I think little Tony only loves little Tony.

I had forgotten how caught up I could get in a MS book, hers and Daphne Du Maurier's are the books I have the hardest time putting down. I did manage to put it down last night and go to sleep. This is after having read it once before.
I can't believe I had forgotten so much. (view spoiler) So, I am remembering just enough to figure things out just as they happen.
Still, it is really fun to read a book for the second time and enjoy it almost like a first time.

Bobbie, I've been having the same experience since it's been so may years since I've read this one. (view spoiler) and plenty of shocks after that!
Meanwhile I just love the horticultural references. Lots of great action scenes and tension.

I think I can thank MS for the beginning of a love of plants (and Shakespeare) which started with my first Stewart read. I had certainly never really looked at them before and couldn't identify much beyond the difference between a pansy and a petunia. I still find it fascinating to re-read one of her books and come upon a plant I've never actually seen!




The asters are native to my part of the U.S., New England, hence the old botanical name Aster novae-angliae. They got to the U.K in the early 1700s and went wild :)


Just want you all to know that this is my favorite speech in my favorite novel. I memorized the "Involved? Heaven Give Me Strength, Involved?" Speech in chapter 16 when I WAS sixteen and can still recite most of it cold. Love Mary Stewart's treatment of the whole situation. Wonderful dialog and irony. My proof of ongoing affection? More than sixteen years later, I kept my promise to name my son after Mr. God-almighty Mark (Langley).


Just want you all to know that this is my favorite speech in my favorite novel. I memorized the "Involved? Heaven Give Me Strength, ..."
"Was he named after Saint Mark?"
"Uh, yes..."

I can't wait for the next time someone yells at me, just so I get the chance to complain about them going down my throat with their boots on! And I look forward to any opportunity at all I might get to respond "not a sausage" to some question put to me.

And I adore the slang highlighted above, and the relationships among the three sailors revealed by that dialogue.

I thought it was too festive, considering (view spoiler) . . . I just think if I were in the situation, I wouldn't be laughing.


(view spoiler)

As Mary Stewart might say, "It can take you this way." There is a slightly hysterical note there that, to me, makes the scene very realistic. Also, Lambis's mood is a bit more subdued, as one might expect. And then, Nicola's outburst – it makes sense to me.

This is so very true. A bad shock can lead to complete disinhibition, a shattering of all our learned behavioral boundaries.

Note: I am dividing the read into 5 sections, each 4 chapters long. I may adjust as we go, so check the chapter numbers for each section! :)