Tag Archives: book reviews

One of the great tragedies in literature

Recently on reddit someone asked who the character is that makes you sad. There are a lot of characters that I could think of but the one that came to my mind is Pangle from my favorite book, Cold Mountain by Charles Frazier.

The book is about Inman trying to get home through the losing south during the last days of the Civil War. He is amongst a group of people called outliers who are hiding from the home guard. One of the outliers is Stobrod, a violinist who after playing a little girl out has no longer been able to focus on the war. He runs into Pangle while hiding in a cave on Cold Mountain.

Pangle was run off his family’s property for being “simple-minded” and he hid in the mountains. He discovered a group of other outliers in his cave and was happy to see them. He fell in love with Stobrod’s music and during a raid on a farmer’s house, Stobrod stole a banjo. Pangle took to the banjo easily and the two became a duo. Even before that, Pangle would curl up next to Stobrod to sleep no matter how many times Stobrod shoved him away. In Stobrod’s words, all Pangle wanted was warmth and music.

The tragedy of Pangle comes when him and Stobrod are discovered by the Home Guard, the group meant to find outliers. They listen to the two play some music with only Stobrod realizing that they’re about to get killed. When the guard tells them to get up against a tree, Pangle throws his arm over Stobrod’s shoulders like they’re getting their picture taken. He won’t stop smiling so the guard tells him to put his hat over his face. He does so and they’re killed.

It’s pretty obvious that Pangle represents the kindness and innocence of people in the face of war. His murder is one of several dozen in this book. But this one always stuck out to me due to its unfairness and tragedy. He didn’t have any involvement in this, the war and its consequences came to him. He could have lived for a long time on that mountain.

Due to their mental state, I’m reminded of Lenny from Of Mice and Men. But the sorrow in Lenny is that a friend did it to him to be kind. Knowing that the fate that he would receive at the hands of the land owner would be far worse. These bastards did it just out of meanness.

Ada and Ruby(Stobrod’s daughter) come up the mountain to bury him and Pangle when they find Stobrod alive. When he’s going back down the mountain, Inman points out where they buried Pangle, Stobrod says “if God was to set out killing every men based on their demerits, that boy would make up the hind end of the line”.

When I read that line, I thought of it as a good way to live. Not with the threat of death from an overseeing God but to continue to show that kind of kindness throughout my life. It would be a nice thing to do.

One of the Saddest Things I’ve Read

The Tomorrow Series by John Marsden is perhaps one of my favorite anti-war book series that I’ve ever read. For those that don’t know, the series is about seven Australian teenagers that go camping in the bush and when they return home, they find that another country has invaded their home. They then become guerilla fighters and try to fight to win back their homeland.

The books are incredible and are each titled exquisitely: “Tomorrow When the War Began”, “The Dead of Night”, “The Third Day, a Frost”, “Darkness, Be My Friend”, “Burning For Revenge”, “The Night is For Hunting” and “The Other Side of Dawn”. They are harrowing to say the least.

But the thing is that it has I think one of the saddest moments when it comes to growing up. Ellie talks about picking up a Barbie and trying to summon the magic of play that she had when she was a child. She just can’t do it. That magic is gone. It’s cut off from her.

I’ve read a fair amount of anti-war and tales about growing up but nothing has resonated with me like that. It’s the same as someone pointing out that there was a point when your parents put you down one day and they never picked you back up. Leaving childhood behind means that you’ll never be able to do some things again.

I’m childfree but I figure that this is partly why people have kids. To give them the things back that they can’t get. I always think about when I went to see the first Inside Out movie and wonder why I saw so many crying adults in there. I wondered if it was because they knew that there was going to be a time when they couldn’t make their kids happy. That their children would have to suffer pain. The inevitability of all of that.

If you haven’t read these books, I highly recommend them. Just be aware that they get very rough at parts. He doesn’t shy away from the realities of it.

Watch the Throne: The Girl King by Mimi Yu and Sisters of the Snake by Sarena and Sasha Nanua Reviews

I happened to take both of these books out of the library at the same time. I didn’t realize in the moment that I was following a theme until I started reading them. Both of them deal with a pair of royal sisters in unique scenarios trying to maintain their control over their kingdoms.

Well, in Sisters of the Snake, they’re not both royalty. One of them is a street thief trying to survive. When she breaks into the palace to steal the royal jewelry on her way out of town, she discovers that her and her twin sister were separated at birth. The two of them decide to princess and the pauper it, with the princess sister heading out into the wilds to find magic and save her country. Meanwhile, her twin has to start learning about court intrigue. From there, the two go on an amazing adventure.

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Meanwhile, in The Girl King, Lu is set to inherit the throne and become the first female empress. She finds out that her father has betrayed her and she is forced to flee into the wilds with a young man who has had his family betrayed by the very country she’s trying to save. The other sister, Min, is left behind forced into a marriage that Lu ran away from. Discovering a magic all her own and possibly becoming a new threat to her sister.

While both of these books are similar in their concept, they couldn’t be any more different in their execution. They actually are somewhat inverses of one another, with the more street wise sister having to learn courtly graces in Sisters of the Snake while the more versatile, stronger sister is in the wilds in the Girl King.

Either way both of them were highly enjoyable reads. I don’t want to give too much away but I would like to make sure you go pick them up. I can’t wait to read their sequels, Daughters of the Dawn by the Nanua sisters and Empress of Flames by Yu.