jhetley: (Default)
jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2007-10-10 09:52 am

Again gray

Another morning of gloom and depression, without the actual rain that would waken mushrooms for Wife's scheduled mushroom program out at the nature center.  That one looks like a washout, if you'll forgive the metaphor at cross-purposes...

And, in honor of last night's PBS Nova program on the samurai sword, a bit from my enigmatic smith in POWERS:

    His kitchen knives -- nickel-iron born from a meteor's corpse, to give each blade the flaming magic of steel pulled from heaven to earth, worked and folded and folded again at the forge, carbon infiltrating the grain of the metal from a reducing fire, thoughts and words of making until the steel took shape and meaning from his hammer, a shape and meaning that could kill a god with the soul he'd forged into its heart.  The blades could slice a tomato paper-thin as well, or bone a slaughtered cow, and he only needed to sharpen them once a decade.  He wondered what would happen if he leaned across the table and drove this knife into the body of the demon. 

[identity profile] quilzas.livejournal.com 2007-10-10 02:03 pm (UTC)(link)
*perks and sits up pretty*

Ooooos

Seems poeticlly descriptive. But maybe that's the morning gloom mood.

[identity profile] wcg.livejournal.com 2007-10-10 03:39 pm (UTC)(link)
I'd like one of those kitchen knives.

[identity profile] sclerotic-rings.livejournal.com 2007-10-10 04:28 pm (UTC)(link)
If you need additional references on Japanese swordmaking, please let me know. I recently came across a wonderful book on the swordsmiths of World War II and how they pretty much had to relearn all of the old smithing techniques of their ancestors from scratch.

[identity profile] starcat-jewel.livejournal.com 2007-10-11 12:54 am (UTC)(link)
I wonder too. What does happen when science-magic meets fantasy-magic?