tlb wrote:ThinksMarkedly wrote:Wait, did the reviewer just compare Allison Harrington to Lwaxanna Troi?
Not a particularly illuminating question, if you are not going to add additional comments on why this is good or bad.
I don't have an argument. But there wasn't much to take from a review of a review... the Lwaxanna part was the only thing that struck me as surprising. I can understand
how John Lennerd can feel what he feels but I also sympathise with the reviewer's point that he goes too far.
I understand the reviewer was comparing two mother-daughter relationships and using a more caricature example to show how the very pretty and sexually-centred Allison Chou Harrington would have an effect on her third-gen prolong, very tall daughter. But that placed a comparison between Allison and Lwaxanna and that was really weird to me.
Allison liked to tease those she knew and she wasn't above causing a few scandals in Grayson society, but she always struck me as mature (intellectually), unselfish, and having her self-esteem under control. She didn't need confirmation of her beauty or her appeal by anyone (other than Alfred, I guess). So to me, Allison never raised her voice; in fact, I imagine she always spoke softly.
And that's in direct contrast to Lwaxanna, who never missed an opportunity to be boisterous, scandalous, and to remind everyone she was a "daughter of the Fifth House, holder of the sacred Chalice of Rixx and heir to the Holy Rings of Betazed" (Deanna once said [in one of the novels] that the Chalice of Rixx was an ugly pot). Lwaxanna overcompensated her insecurity and could never show weakness, though of course it's difficult to say "insecurity" about a gifted telepath who was raised in a society where the concept of lying would be absurd.