ldwechsler wrote:cthia wrote:
Here's my disconnect. Wasn't the Old Republic — Pericard's Republic that Eloise and Thomas are so passionate about — a government that Esther loved as well? Before the graft and corruption set in. Didn't she also see that the problem was the disease of corruption that had gripped those in power and not the Republic itself?
Any government is only as good as its strongest link and as weak as its most corrupt.
feyhunde wrote:I mean Napoleon was a member of the Jacobin clubs and wrote pamphlets in favor of the Republic. Napoleon justified his later overthrow of The Directory on the grounds of the corruption of the members of the Directory.
It is pretty clear that years ago, RFC was still hung up on the Brit/French Revolution paradigm. That has changed.
You are in error.
I was never "hung up on the Brit/French Revolution paradigm" at all. I was headed in another direction from the get-go; I just didn't want the
reader to realize where I was going before I got to Tom's final move. So I waved the Tennis Court Oath, the Committee of Public Safety, Rob. S Pierre, and Naomi Bonaparte (aka Esther McQueen) at you with my left hand to keep you looking in one direction until I got ready to show you where I'd really been going with my
write hand [sorry; couldn't resist] the entire time. If you look closely, you should see the Old Republic peeking through in the perspectives of people like Wu and Theismann from the outset, though.
It is a serious mistake to look too closely for historical models in my writing. I love to take
bits and pieces of historical societies and governments and use them to build my literary universes, but if you look under the hood, you'll usually see that I'm building quite a different animal.
When people do look for historical parallels, it does help that, in a literary sense, so many historical herrings are bolsheviks, though.