May 05 2008

The thistle and the rose

Published by Fence under Books

Image of The Thistle and the RoseAuthor: Jean Plaidy
ISBN: 9780099493259 DDC: 823.914
Read with Historical Favorites
See also: LibraryThing ; Literature Map ; Scandalous Women ; Susan Higginbotham

In an apartment of that royal palace which recently, by the command of the King, had had its name changed from Shene to Richmond, three children were ranged about a blazing fire.

This novel tells the story of Margaret Tudor, daughter of King Henry VII of England, and sister to King Henry VIII. As a teenager she married King James IV of Scotland in an effort to bring peace between England and Scotland. The rose and the thistle of the novel’s title.

Jean Plaidy has written plenty of historical fiction books. This is the 8th in the Tudor series alone. But it is the first one I’ve ever read by her. And I’d have to say I’m not really all that impressed.

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Tags: 1400s, 5 Stars, average, Britain - Tudors, British royalty - Henry VIII, British royalty - James IV, British royalty - Margaret Tudor, C15th, England - 1400s, fictional bio, group read, Historical Favorites, historical fiction, Jean Plaidy, Scotland - 1400s, The thistle and the rose

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Oct 08 2007

1916

Published by Fence under Books

Author: Morgan Llywelyn
ISBN: 0812574923 DDC: 813.54
See also: LibraryThing ;

Ned awoke with a start.
The atmosphere in the darkened cabin was warm and close, smelling of lavender wax and fresh linen.

Image of 1916Ned Halloran has just survived the sinking of the Titanic. Traumatised by the loss of life, including that of his parents, he returns home to Ireland. His older brother takes over the running of the farm and Ned is lucky enough to be sent to school. The school chosen for him is St. Edna’s, or Scoil Eanna, a secondary school set up by Padraig Pearse. There he becomes caught up by the nationalist feelings and teaching and becomes involved in the Easter Rising of 1916.

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Tags: 1916, 1916 Rising, 6 Stars, 813.54, C20th, group read, Historical Favorites, historical fiction, IRA, IRB, Ireland - 1900s, Ireland - Rebellion, Morgan Llywelyn, rebellion, revolution

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Jul 17 2007

Restoration

Published by Fence under Books

Author: Rose Tremain
ISBN: 9780340936436 DDC: 823.914
Read with HistoricalFavorites
See also: LibraryThing

I am, I discover, a very untidy man.
Look at me. Without my periwig, I am an affront to neatness.

Image of RestorationRobert Merival, the narrator of Rose Tremain’s Restoration, is, at the start of this book, a 37 year old doctor. He is one of the king’s favourites, and is utterly devoted to Charles II himself. So much so that he agrees to marry the king’s mistress, Celia, in order to persuade another of the royal mistresses that she is out of the picture. In reality though Charles will continue to see her, and Merival must never fall in love with her. She may be married to Merival, but she is the king’s.

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Tags: 1660s, 8 Stars, 823.914, Britain - Early modern, Britain - Restoration, British royalty - Charles II, C17th, first person narrator, group read, Historical Favorites, historical fiction, medical fiction, Restoration, Rose Tremain

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May 19 2007

Katherine

Published by Fence under Books

Author: Anya Seton
ISBN: 0340157011 DDC: 813.52
Read with HistoricalFavorites
See also: LibraryThing | Wikipedia on Katherine Swynford | Katherine Swynford society

In the tender green time of April, Katherine set forth at last upon her journey with the two nuns and the royal messenger.

Image of KatherineThe Katherine of the title starts out this book as an orphan, raised by nuns, but heading off to the royal court at the whim of the queen. There she becomes betrothed to Hugh Swynford; she also meets the Duke of Lancaster, John of Gaunt. And it is John that she falls in love with, although at first he seems to dislike her.

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Tags: 7 Stars, 813.52, Britain - middle ages, British royalty - mistresses, fictional bio, group read, Historical Favorites, historical fiction, John of Gaunt, Katherine, Katherine Swynford, romance

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May 09 2007

The Sunne in Splendour

Published by Fence under Books

Author: Sharon K. Penman
ISBN: 0140067647 DDC: 813.54
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See also: Library Thing ; Wikipedia ; The Richard III Society ;

Richard did not become frightened until darkness began to settle over the woods. In the fading light, the trees began to take on unfamiliar and menacing shapes.

Image of Sunne in SplendourWe all know the myth of the “princes in the tower” and their evil uncle, Richard, who murdered them. Mainly because of Shakespeare’s play. This novel attempts to recreate the life of Richard of Gloucester, and the times in which he lived and died. And it does a great job of bringing the era to life. It also does an excellent job in dispelling many of the rumours about Richard and his rule. But more importantly than that Penman creates real characters that are entertaining and believable. The one huge problem with historical fiction, especially those novels written about real people is that you know how it the story is going to end.

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Tags: 8 Stars, 813.54, Britain - middle ages, British royalty - Richard III, C15th, fictional bio, group read, Historical Favorites, historical fiction, Sharon K. Penman, The Sunne in Splendour, War, War of the Roses

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Nov 17 2006

One Thousand White Women

Published by Fence under Books

The Journals of May Dodd
Author: Jim Fergus
ISBN: 0312199430
DDC: 813.54
See also: Library Thing ; HistoricalFavorites ; Jim Fergus.com

23 March 1875
Today is my birthday, and I have received the greatest gift of all - freedom! I make these first poor scribblings aboard the westbound Union Pacific train with departed Union Station Chicago at 6.35 a.m. this morning, bound for Nebraska Territory.

Image of One Thousand White WomenIn 1854 a Cheyenne chief asked the United States government for one thousand white brides to marry into the people. Cheyenne society was a matrilineal society the resulting children, to their minds, would belong to white society. Yet they would also have an understanding of Cheyenne ways, and so it seemed a good way of joining white man’s society. Of course this didn’t go down to well in the white man’s world, and the offer was refused.

In this novel Fergus imagines what would have happened had the US govt decided to go along with this Cheyenne idea. In secret, of course.

The main protagonist in the novel is May Dodd, it is her journal that we are reading. And the letters she wrote to her family members back east, knowing she would never post them, and so using them more as a method of venting her frustrations and feelings at life in general. Before she agreed to join the Brides programme May was locked away in a mental asylum. The reason, she tells us, is that she committed the crime of falling in love. Falling in love and having two out of wedlock children with a man far beneath her in class and standing. Her family were not impressed and so arranged to have her placed out of sight, and out of mind. And, in order to escape the asylum she agrees to travel west and marry a strange savage Indian.

The whole book is told through Dodd’s eyes, she introduces us to the other women who have likewise agreed. The criminal, the insane, the poor and the adventurous. But there aren’t a thousand, she and her companions are the first train to leave the east. And as gold is discovered in Indian territory, they will be the last.

I quite enjoyed this book. It tells a good story and moves at a fairly decent pace. The writing style is very readable and it is all entertaining.

But May and her companions don’t really seem all that well-drawn as characters. Part of that I suppose is because it is May who is describing the other women, and indeed the Cheyennes she meets. And she describes them in cliches and stereotypes. We have the southern plantation lady with a drawl, a poodle, and a reluctance to marry any dahmn niggah, there are the Irish red headed twins with their thieving and oirish accents. The silent and noble Cheyenne chief, the dirty no-good half-breed.

And because of that I was never really all that gripped by this read. And it also made me wonder of some of the events that happened, or character traits, were there simply to move the plot along. Merely a device to get X here and Y there. Still, it was entertaining, and raised some interesting points. But at the end of the day it wasn’t a great read.

Tags: 1854, 6 Stars, 813.54, alternate history, Cheyenne, clichéd, diary, first person narrator, group read, Historical Favorites, historical fiction, Indians, Jim Fergus, native Americans, One Thousand White Women, stereotypes, USA - western

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Aug 20 2006

The Agony and the Ecstasy

Published by Fence under Books

Author: Irving Stone
ISBN: 0099416271
DDC: 813.54
See also: LibraryThing; Wikipedia on Michelangelo; Michelangelo.com; Art of Florence
Read with Historical Favorites - group site

He sat before the mirror of the second-floor bedroom sketching his lean cheeks with their high bone ridges, the flat broad forehead, and ears too far back on the head, the dark hair curling forward in thatches, the amber-coloured eyes well-set but heavy-lidded.

This is a big book; over 750 pages of small print and crowded pages. So when I began to read and wasn’t all that impressed I thought I’d end up tossing it. The prose felt forced, stilted and somewhat boring. But as I read on I did get more and more interested. At the same time however, the style of prose doesn’t really improve. I enjoyed the book while reading it, but it was never a case that I simply couldn’t put the book down. In fact on a few occasions I wasn’t all that bothered to pick it up.

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Tags: 813.54, biography, C15th, C16th, de Medici family, fictional bio, group read, Historical Favorites, historical fiction, Irving Stone, Italy - Florence, Italy - renaissance, Michelangelo Buanarotti, Renaissance, stilted, The Agony and the Ecstasy

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