Low Key Lyesmith, a grifter from Minnesota with orange-blonde hair, and a morbid sense of humour involving a lot of gallows.
Come on! XD
Everything and nothing
Low Key Lyesmith, a grifter from Minnesota with orange-blonde hair, and a morbid sense of humour involving a lot of gallows.
Come on! XD
The obviousness of it was published on July 3. 2007 and filed in A Praise Chorus, Annoyance, British humour, Disappointment, Gaiman, Literature, Loki, My microcosmos, Old Heroes, Pain, Rant, Speculative fiction.
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In other words, it only took me half a day to surrender my first attempt at reading LotR in four or five years. After “Tigana” — the freshness, the quality, the brainspanking sentimentality of it — LotR seemed dull, worn-out, and altogether not very appealing.
So I though, “Fuck it,” threw the book away (or, not really, as it’s a rather nice copy that my sister gave me for Christmas; it was more like putting it gently aside than throwing it, then, I guess), and went off in search of my sister’s copy of “The Lies of Locke Lamora”.
However, in the same pillar of books that TLoLL is stored, she also kept some other things. At the first glance of Terry Pratchett’s “The Light Fantastic” — which I haven’t read in six years or so — all thoughts of TLoLL were forgotten. But mere nanoseconds later, even my dreams of Discworld were blasted into oblivion, as my eyes fell upon “American Gods”.
It really is a shame when my sister brings better fantasy novels with her back home for the holiday, that I do myself. Even though at the moment, nothing can really compare to “Tigana”.
Oh well. Off to Shadow, Low Key, Wednesday and the rest for an hour or two before bedtime.
3. July 2007 @ 23:51 ( Permalink )
Oh, Gods, he even has a “scarred smile”. XD
3. July 2007 @ 23:54 ( Permalink )
Yeah, no literature has ever embarrased me as much as not getting that hint.
I actually suspected he was Loki ’cause I was basically reading the book going “where is Loki? :D” and hoping to find him. But at no point did the actual obvious hints, such as the hair or his gorram name, come through to me. O.o
4. July 2007 @ 07:15 ( Permalink )
In related new, Scott Lynch has a cat named Loki
And, yeah, I didn’t catch that either…
4. July 2007 @ 15:25 ( Permalink )
I think it’d be way more obvious if I’d read it as an audio-book, said out loud “Low Key” is way more obvious….
4. July 2007 @ 17:28 ( Permalink )
Yeah.
Also, I blame Gaiman. He made Odin so bloody obvious, I never even considered the option of Low Key being a god.
4. July 2007 @ 20:11 ( Permalink )
He’s snuck in too early, you see. Low Key appears before any of the other gods, before you as the reader start thinking “aha, this is a supernatural one” whenever a new character shows up. To put it simply, he shows up *before* Odin. And then forgotten about for half the book. Which is a really, really clever ploy to keep the mind from pondering the nature of his character as one reads.
5. July 2007 @ 01:45 ( Permalink )
Oh yeah, I was rather upset myself when I realised who he was. Odin was obvious, and so should Loki been. Sigh…
Damn. Now I want to read it as well.
5. July 2007 @ 18:43 ( Permalink )