How it seemed that humans have lost hope/magic and have become callous to everything that isn't some commodity; how fairy with no earthiness has become shallow and brittle and just as destructive. For real people I think she is talking about a lack of balance between the mundane and the mysterious. Too much of one attribute or the other and destruction will eventually result.
Nimea said:- it still irritates me a bit that Carabosse comments on Beauty's intelligence or lack thereof at the beginning;
Erfael said:Why does it irritate you? I noticed it, but it didn't really bother me. I did ponder this through the rest of the book, though, as she really didn't seem all that dumb to me.
Nevyn said:I enjoyed Beauty immensely up until I had finished the book and given it some more thought . I liked how the story was used to describe mankinds distruction of the planet , of how we as a race are draining the world of it's magic (beauty) . I liked her spin on how Oberon thought he could trick God , I see mankind thinking they're equally as clever in the real world .
I found the book to be both intelligent and thought provoking only to be somewhat ruined by a huge contradiction bordering on hypocracy on Tepper's behalf ! The whole story is about how we destroy , rape and defile and yet Tepper chose to add this for who was in hell
" Others are here, many from the twentieth. Those who forbade birth control and abortion, worshipping the fetus over all other of God's creations. "
Either way I try to look at the meaning , I still find it out of context with the message of her story , for the destruction of life is still destroying God's creation ! Yes I am a Christian but I can assure you my personal beliefs diddn't help me reach this conclusion !
Anyhow , good book I will be reading some more of Tepper's books soon .
Nevyn said:I found the book to be both intelligent and thought provoking only to be somewhat ruined by a huge contradiction bordering on hypocracy on Tepper's behalf ! The whole story is about how we destroy , rape and defile and yet Tepper chose to add this for who was in hell
" Others are here, many from the twentieth. Those who forbade birth control and abortion, worshipping the fetus over all other of God's creations. "
Either way I try to look at the meaning , I still find it out of context with the message of her story , for the destruction of life is still destroying God's creation ! Yes I am a Christian but I can assure you my personal beliefs diddn't help me reach this conclusion !
Anyhow , good book I will be reading some more of Tepper's books soon .
FicusFan said:Uh I beg to differ you most certainely used your beliefs to reach that conclusion.
A fetus is no more deserving of 'life' than hair or nails or skin, or any other part of your body that is alive because you are. It has no independent existence. Once a fetus becmes capable of living on its own outside the womb then you are talking about something that does have life, a baby, and should be treated differrently. And I don't mean life as being hooked up to machines or turning into a vegetable for the rest of your life. Until that time it is no more than a collection of cells with the potential for life.
If you think differently then be true to your beleifs and don't have an abortion, but don't try to make everyone in the world live by them too.
Firstly , your opinion on a fetus is just that . Your opinion!FicusFan said:Uh I beg to differ you most certainely used your beliefs to reach that conclusion.
A fetus is no more deserving of 'life' than hair or nails or skin, or any other part of your body that is alive because you are. It has no independent existence. Once a fetus becmes capable of living on its own outside the womb then you are talking about something that does have life, a baby, and should be treated differrently. And I don't mean life as being hooked up to machines or turning into a vegetable for the rest of your life. Until that time it is no more than a collection of cells with the potential for life.
If you think differently then be true to your beleifs and don't have an abortion, but don't try to make everyone in the world live by them too.
I think that Tepper was worring about overpopulation not only for the environment but for women, children and families. Those who are better educated, and have more money have fewer children. When you have fewer children you can take care of the ones you do have better, both emotionally and financially. The children have a better start and more opportunities.
Eventine said:One thing that bothered me:
Beauty never really attempted to alter her own past - numerous times she could have attempted to change Jaybee in his timeline before he met her, but she chose not too. Maybe she felt it was inevitable?
But if that were the case, why, when in the future as an old lady, did she retrieve her money and attempt to steer mankind away from Fiddipur?
Eventine said:I took Teppers comments about abortion to be a commentary on the Catholic church preventing the use of contraception and abortion
However, I didn't take the other church comments throughout the book (the transfer of magic from fairy to the church) as an attack on the church, and more of a plot element to explain the dissolution of fairy.
It looks like some people here didn't enjoy the future sections of the book. I thought they were the most important - without an understanding of the terrible fate awaiting mankind Beauty wouldn't have had the motivations she did throughout the rest of the novel.
It's interesting to me to see that other people thought the novel was "preachy". It seemed to me the whole point of the novel was its message - to me, without the commentary it would have been a boring modification of a fairy tale (as I mentioned above, the retelling of the fairytale elements to me were some of the slowest part so the book). I'd read Maguire or someone else doing parodies if that was what I was looking for.
One thing that bothered me:
Beauty never really attempted to alter her own past - numerous times she could have attempted to change Jaybee in his timeline before he met her, but she chose not too. Maybe she felt it was inevitable?
But if that were the case, why, when in the future as an old lady, did she retrieve her money and attempt to steer mankind away from Fiddipur?
Erfael said:This reminds me of something: I'm not sure she could have altered Jaybee before they "met." I'm not sure she had much personal choice at all in the grand scheme of things. When she first meets Bill as a young girl he has the heels and the "soft things" that she gives him when she's an old woman. That to me sort of says that the future and the past are all laid out already, with nothing she does really changing them -- their meeting on the whaler, their not being allowed to finish their documentary. By the first time she meets the film crew (which is the last time in their chronology), all of the previous encounters had already been played out, implying that that was the course events were going to take (unless you want to get into some sort of quantum debate, but Tepper didn't structure it that way, so I'm not sure it applies). Just a niggling thing, but something that often bothers me in this kind of bouncing around in time book.
Maybe she's just trying to get the message across that even if something is inevitable, we still need to try to do something about it....I don't know.
