Haha, I’m so funny. To be honest though, I had a hard time taking this book seriously, which was probably the point. Literature should be fun and it should reflect the tastes of the day and I have absolutely no qualms in taking liberties with classics in an effort to spread their appeal, this book just didn’t appeal to me in particular. I’m not interested in zombies, vampires, werewolves, etc… I just don’t care. Give me wizards, hobbits, and elves any day, but keep your undead, your cursed, and your gratuitous violence.
One of the redeeming qualities of PPZ (Lindsay’s acronym) is that my husband enjoyed it. We had a couple road trips this month when I regaled him with stories of Elizabeth cleaning house with Lady Catherine’s ninjas and I caught a chuckle here and there. I asked for a zombie tutorial from him and was surprised to learn how little there was to zombie-lore: they have a virus, they don’t feel pain, they eat brains. That’s pretty much it. Not a particularly deep mythology I guess.
I did some of my own fact-finding (thank you Wikipedia) and learned that the myth comes variously form Haitian Vodou, New Orleans Voodoo, West African Vodun, and Hollywood. Of course. Hollywood would blend ancient religious practices and modern warfare and come up with “Resident Evil,” well done western culture. Really, brav-o.
I chose a different route with this one since I remembered the original story well: book on CD. Appropriately, it was a woman with an English accent. It was a joy to listen to. The only thing I should have done to supplement this parody was have a copy of the original; I had some moments wondering what happened in the original during an obviously "parodied" moment.
ReplyDeleteAngela and I started to begin on this topic, but stopped in lieu of the fact that no one else had started the book yet: Elizabeth was quite aggressive. While the characters had different skills and priorities in PPZ, everyone remained with their original characteristics. Except Elizabeth took a more angry and even selfish tone. It was difficult to swallow, since I really enjoyed the headstrong, ahead-of-her-time Elizabeth Bennet of Pride and Prejudice.
Now, on to the movie!!
I jumped into the book this weekend - it's action packed to say the least. I also changed the blog background to red and black to be more sinister than pink hummingbirds.
ReplyDeleteI don't know Amanda, pink hummingbirds are the deadliest and most cunningly violent. But I like the blood-tone as well.
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