Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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A RED-ROSE CHAIN open thread!

To celebrate the release of A Red-Rose Chain, here. Have an open thread to discuss the book. Judging by the comments I'm seeing, some of you have had time, and I'd really, really rather book discussion (sometimes including spoilers) didn't crop up on other posts.

THERE WILL BE SPOILERS.

Seriously. If anyone comments here at all, THERE WILL BE SPOILERS. So please don't read and then yell at me because you encountered spoilers. You were warned. (I will not reply to every comment; I call partial comment amnesty. But I may well join some of the discussion, or answer questions or whatnot.) I will be DELETING all comments containing spoilers which have been left on other posts. No one gets to spoil people here without a label.

You can also start a discussion at my website forums, with less need to be concerned that I will see everything you say! In case you wanted, you know, discussion free of authorial influence, since I always wind up getting involved in these things.

Have fun, and try not to bleed on the carpet.
Tags: a red-rose chain, discussion post, toby daye
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  • 172 comments
I think locking Walther away would be bad on many levels, but allow me to play Devil's Advocate (cause it tickles me). Bridget's 'protective custody' is for the sake of Faerie, not her. She's under a geas that won't let her expose Faerie, so she is free to keep teaching. Walther would be hiding from those who would want to kidnap or murder him, and one way to make that easier for such nefarious types would be to, oh, be predictable and accessible, like someone going to teach classes regularly.
I think people are conflating "protection" with being locked away. I'm suggesting a security team a la Secret Service, not Walther being locked away in a knowe. A security detail as he lives his life pretty normally otherwise.
Someone living with a protective detail from the secret service (for non-US readers, this is the department that is best known for providing bodyguards for the US president) is /not/ by any stretch of the definition living a normal life. For example, see http://www.huffingtonpost.com/conde-nast-traveler/restaurants-with-secret-service_b_2552187.html.

And I wouldn't be confident that this level of security would be sufficient to deter threats from opponents with glamour, shape shifting, and teleportation abilities, although I'm not sure if being locked in a knowe would help with these concerns either.

In regards to Bridget, nobody is /specifically/ targeting her -- practically speaking, it is likely that very few people even know that she exists. To the degree that a threat exists at all, though, there isn't any effective way of nullifying the risk -- the threat is intrinsic to the knowledge she has of the Fae and I believe it was explicitly stated that the only way to remove the knowledge would be to kill her. In Walther's case, though, widely disseminating knowledge of the cure would minimize the number of people with an interest in killing, kidnapping, or threatening him.