Preview Mode Links will not work in preview mode

CraftLit - Serialized Classic Literature for Busy Book Lovers


All of CraftLit's Catalogue can be found here: https://bit.ly/craftlit-library-2023

__________

*CraftLit’s Socials*

*SUPPORT THE SHOW!*

If you want to join us for a particular Book or Watch Party but don't want a monthly subscription, please use PayPal.me/craftlit or CraftLit @ Venmo and include what you want to attend in the message field. Please give us at least 24 hours to get your message and add you to the attendee list.    

  • Download the FREE CraftLit App for iOS or Android (you can call or email feedback straight from within the app)
  • Call 1-206-350-1642

---------------------------------------------------------------

We use royalty-free music from the YouTube Creator’s Library. Other music heard on CraftLit downloaded from (now defunct) Free Podsafe Music site “Garage Band”:

  • Opening Music: Joshua Christian, “Chasing Hiro: Sailing the Gale”
  • Closing Music: Matthew Shell, “Love Part Two (Original Mis)”
  • CraftLit makes a small commission from sales made through any product links above.

Aug 16, 2007

First, once again, HUGE thanks to Julie who allowed me a much needed period of rest last week before the madness began again this week. I hope y'all scoot over to listen to Forgotten Classics too! (That Heyer woman is a hoot!)

Things I rambled about: Kohlberg's Morality Stages (I mentioned this before, right? It's soooo kewl!), anaphora, Iago.

And next...Tristan and Isolde! The High Drama of Chivalric Romance Will Commence!

BUT WAIT!
There's More!

Julie, our guest host, had this to say about 300:


Now, about 300. It is NOT like the Terminator movies. For one thing the photography is a thing of beauty even if you don't like the movie. For another, yes there is a lot of shouting and sword fighting but the emphasis is on love of a husband and wife for each other, for their family, their city, their country and their culture. Drawn in broad terms, granted, but we ARE talking about Spartans here. Not a lot of subtlety. As well as the comic book version. Also not known for subtlety.

However, when we began watching it, it was clear that this movie was being drawn in heroic, epic terms. That made me instantly think of how the Spartans themselves would have thought and told the story ... in fact, the story is being told by a Spartan. Watching the whole movie as being seen through their eyes made the movie entirely enjoyable for me, as well as those themes mentioned above.

Heavens, look at how much I wrote. Not that I'm passionately defending it or anything! :-D

So!
I stand corrected...and definitely intrigued!