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lightreads ([personal profile] lightreads) wrote2021-06-19 07:42 pm

Archer's Goon by Diana Wynne Jones

Archer's Goon

3/5. The one about Howard, whose father is supposed to produce 2,000 words every quarter for a mysterious personage, or else, and the or else gets his family entangled in a set of seven mysterious alien siblings controlling the town.

This is a weird one. It's making a subtle but strange point about the difference between unpleasant people who are sympathetic and interesting, and unpleasant people who are not. The difference being self-awareness. Howard knows he has the potential to be a twit, and he definitely sees the dark road his sister* (named Awful, just in case you missed it) could go down. But his father is a raging twit and has no idea, and is rendered insufferable thereby. That's some complex stuff for a kid's book, which is typical DWJ. But it's not all that much fun to read about.

*I gloss her as genderqueer, btw. You can make a pretty good case for it in the text, though it's clearly not what DWJ actually intended.
jadelennox: Senora Sabasa Garcia, by Goya (Default)

[personal profile] jadelennox 2021-06-20 04:35 am (UTC)(link)

I have always liked it so much for the way that some of the most selfish people are some of the best without necessarily becoming less selfish: Torquil, Awful, Hathaway. They're not selfish-horrid like Venturus or Shine, but they don't have reformation arcs. They're selfish people who can feel love and make sacrifices for others, as opposed to nothing but self-glorification.