The Gormenghast books are more or less about a castle full of what I’d call anti-rationalists. They are entirely ruled by customs passed down from prehistory, and are generally incapable of change or improvement.
Enter Steerpike, villain of the piece and scullery boy. He is, I guess I ’d call it awake, and strives to improve his lot rather than being content with what his birth dooms him to. He is resisted at every turn by the denizen’s bloody minded traditionalism (Spoilers: at one point he murders the 90 year old Master of Rituals, hoping to take his place, only for his 70 year old apprentice to come creeping out of the Room of Abiding where he has been waiting for this moment his entire life.)
Steerpike ultimately descends into terrorism out of more or less pure frustration. There’s an incident where his evil works are discovered, but he feels relief more than anything else, since he no longer has to pretend to swallow their dogmas. I see shades of him in Voldemort’s expressed deep loathing of the ordinary folks. I think he’s delighted to have Harry to talk to, despite being his enemy.
Thanks. Gormenghast is one thing that I found in my Google search, but the description that I read of Steerpike didn’t highlight loneliness as a character trait.
The Gormenghast books are more or less about a castle full of what I’d call anti-rationalists. They are entirely ruled by customs passed down from prehistory, and are generally incapable of change or improvement.
Enter Steerpike, villain of the piece and scullery boy. He is, I guess I ’d call it awake, and strives to improve his lot rather than being content with what his birth dooms him to. He is resisted at every turn by the denizen’s bloody minded traditionalism (Spoilers: at one point he murders the 90 year old Master of Rituals, hoping to take his place, only for his 70 year old apprentice to come creeping out of the Room of Abiding where he has been waiting for this moment his entire life.)
Steerpike ultimately descends into terrorism out of more or less pure frustration. There’s an incident where his evil works are discovered, but he feels relief more than anything else, since he no longer has to pretend to swallow their dogmas. I see shades of him in Voldemort’s expressed deep loathing of the ordinary folks. I think he’s delighted to have Harry to talk to, despite being his enemy.
Thanks. Gormenghast is one thing that I found in my Google search, but the description that I read of Steerpike didn’t highlight loneliness as a character trait.