Monday, November 30, 2009

Children of the Mind (1-370)

This passage occurs when Peter and Wang-mu first arrive on Divine Wind, after having only communicated long distance previously. They are just beginning to know each other, and have yet to explore the boundaries of their relationship.
She opened her eyes again and strode out into the hip-high grass toward
home. He saw her and waited wordlessly as she approached. Bees
buzzed around her; butterflies staggered drunkly through the air, avoiding
her somehow in their seemingly random flight. At the last moment, she
reached out and gathered a bee from a blossom into her hand, into her fist, but
then quickly, before it could sting her, she lobbed it into Peter's face. [19]
In a book practically devoid of any romantic interest, this quote stands out from the rest. Card spends a paticullarly long time developing the scene, and the imagery is overwhelming. He takes great pains to paint the encounter as a playful one, pointing out the contrast between her actions, youthful and teasing, with the emphasis on the word fist, which symbolically is violent and angry.

Card, Orson. Children of the Mind. New York, NY: Tom Doherty Associates LLC, 1996.

1 comment:

  1. I find this passage to be funny. The last thing one would expect is for someone to punch someone else in the face, but thats exactly what happened. And I also noticed that Divine Wind is Kamakazi in Japanese. I am not sure if the author put that in there as an accident, or on purpose, but either way, I like the way it is used. This book sounds like an interesting read to me.

    -Zach Smith

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