Posts Tagged ‘historical fiction’

27
Jun

The Dragon Waiting

   Posted by: Fence   in Books

Image of The Dragon WaitingAuthor: John M. Ford
ISBN:9780575073784 DDC: 813
LibraryThing ; Other reviews

The road the Romans made traversed North Wales a little way inland, between the weather off the Irish Sea and the mountains of Gwynedd and Powys; past the copper and the lead that the travel-hungry Empire craved.

Where to start with this book’s plot summary? Cause there is a whole load going on. From Florence’s Lorenzo de Medici to England’s Richard III and a whole host in between. I suppose you could say it is a look at a Europe that might have been. An alternate Europe with wizards; one where the Byzantine Empire a threat and vampires rule Milan.

Actually that all sounds a bit trashy, but this isn’t a trashy novel at all, not in the least. It has plenty of action and the odd fantasy cliche, but it is very well-written and makes the reader work. I think that might be why it took me so long to get into it. In the beginning it just didn’t grab me and make me keep on reading. But it did more than enough to make me come back to it; so I’m going to complain there.

Course the reason i picked it up in the first place it because of the new cover. Not that one anobii are showing you, but the re-issued Ultimate Fantasy cover. Its got its dragon, but it also that that clean minimalist feel to it. I likes.

Back to the book.

I’m still not sure what to say. I’d recommend it, without a doubt, to any fantasy or historical fan. But there is just so much going on, it is a densely written book, that I think it really does need a reread. There are whole sections the book skips, letting the reader know what happened but never going into huge details. The characters don’t reveal all to us. We are left to speculate and wonder in many instances. That’s not a negative, by the way, it isn’t done in a lazy way, as if the author couldn’t be bothered, it is just that it serves the story better this way.

It probably works a lot better if you know a bit of history, having read Penman’s The Sunne In Splendour helped me a lot with the Richard III storyline. And it helps that, although influenced by Shakespeare, this book is more in Richard’s favour than interested in painting him the villain of the piece. What can I say, I’m loyal to my favourite literary characters, I don’t really care what the history *really* says.

Tags: 8 Stars, 813, alternate history, Britain - middle ages, British royalty - Edward IV, British royalty - Richard III, C11th, C16th, de Medici family, England - middle ages, historical fiction, Italy - Florence, John M. Ford, sff, The Dragon Waiting, Wales - middle ages, War of the Roses, World Fantasy Award winner

Related posts

24
Jun

The Remains of the Day

   Posted by: Fence   in Books

Image of The Remains of the DayAuthor: Kazuo Ishiguro
ISBN: 0571154913 DDC: 823.914
LibraryThing : More Reviews

It seems increasingly likely that I really will undertake the expedition that has been occupying my imagination now for some days.

The Remains of the Day is about Stevens, a butler in a “grand old English house”. He spent his life trying to be a “great” butler in the service of Lord Darlington. With the death of Darlington he remains in Darlington Hall working for the new owner a rich American, Mr Farraday. It is at Mr. Farraday’s suggestion that Stevens, our narrator, first begins thinking about taking a short trip out into the English countryside, and to see Miss Kenton. Now Mrs. Benn she recently sent him a letter, hinting, Stevens thinks, at her unhappy marriage and her wish to return to service in Darlington Hall. On his journey Stevens reflects over his life and the changes he has seen.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: 10 Stars, 823.914, Booker Prize winner, Britain - 1900s, character study, England, English aristocracy, first person narrator, historical fiction, Interwar Britain, Kazuo Ishiguro, social history, The remains of the day

Related posts

2
Jun

Empire of Ivory

   Posted by: Fence   in Books

Author: Naomi NovikImage of Empire of Ivory
Book 4 in the Temeraire series.
ISBN: 9780007256747 DDC:
See also: LibraryThing ; Other reviews ; Novik’s LJ

“Send up another, damn you, send them all up, at once if you have to,” Laurence said savagely to poor Calloway, who did not deserve to be sworn at: the gunner was firing off the flares so quickly his hands were scorched black, skin cracking and peeling to bright red where some power had spilled onto his fingers; he was not stopping to wipe them clean before setting each flare to the match.

Dragons and the Napoleonic wars. What could possibly be better? Well, I suppose there really isn’t too much of the Napoleonic wars in this book. Laurence and Temeraire are back from their trip to China, but they had returned to a plague. The dragons of Britain are ill; some are dead and more are dying. So off they head to maybe track down a cure. And of course they get embroiled in plenty of adventures along the way.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: 7 Stars, 813.6, alternate history, Britain - Napoleonic wars, dragons, Empire of Ivory, fantasy, historical fiction, Naomi Novik, series, sff, Temeraire

Related posts

16
May

A Fine Balane

   Posted by: Fence   in Books

Image of A Fine BalanceAuthor: Rohinton Mistry
ISBN: 057123058x DDC: 813.54
See Also: LibraryThing ; Oprah’s Discussion ; BlogCritics ; Simon and Janet’s blog

Dina Dalal seldom indulged in looking back at her life with regret or bitterness, or questioning why things had turned out the way the way they had, cheating her of the bright future everyone had predicted for her when she was in school, when her name was still Dina Shroff.

I’m not really sure where to begin with this review. This is a big book, both in the amount of pages and in the amount of ground it covers. Set in an un-named city in India during the State of Emergency after India’s founding it deals with four main characters whose lives intersect in the house of Dina Dalal who hires two tailors and rents out a room to a young student in an attempt to keep her independence.

Each character gets a chance to backtrack and tell their story; Dina’s is one of love and then grief as her husband is killed in a road accident, and then of her desire to remain independent of her over-bearing older brother. Ishvar and Om are two Hindi tailors who have travelled to the city to make their fortune and escape the caste system of their home village. Maneck is the student lodger whose family lost much of their fortune during the Partition.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: 1970s, 813.54, 9 Stars, A Fine Balance, Booker Prize nominee, corruption, historical fiction, India, India - 1970s, Oprah pick, poverty, Rohinton Mistry, sterilization

Related posts

8
May

Achilles

   Posted by: Fence   in Books

Image of AchillesAuthor: Elizabeth Cook
ISBN: 0413771393 DDC: 813.54
Read for the Once Upon a Time Challenge
See also: LibraryThing ; John Sledge ; Brief author bio

Two rivers. Flowing in contrary directions.
Two layers of water, each moving steadily, separate and self-possessed.

When I was thinking of books to read for the myth section of Carl’s challenge I did consider the Iliad, and the Odyssey too, so when I was wandering around the library and stumbled across this book it seemed perfect. And I’m so glad I picked it up; it makes for a really good read.

This is a very poetic novel. And more than a tad post-modern. But don’t be put off, it is beautifully told. Or maybe told is the wrong word. Cook doesn’t really attempt to tell any story, rather she gives us flashes of scenes, hints at this and that, spartan[1] depictions of events and people. It works so well.

Read the rest of this entry »

Linknotes:
  1. see what I did there?
Tags: 813.54, 9 Stars, Achilles, Ancient Greece - Sparta, Ancient Greece - Troy, beautiful prose, Elizabeth Cook, Greek myth, Helen of Troy, historical fiction, Homer, Iliad, myth, Once Upon A Time Challenge, retelling myths, Trojan War

Related posts

5
May

The thistle and the rose

   Posted by: Fence   in 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.

Read the rest of this entry »

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

Related posts

Image of The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford
Author: Ron Hansen
ISBN: 0285637541 DDC: 813.54
See also: LibraryThing ;

He was growing into middle age and was living then in a bungalow on Woodland Avenue. Green weeds split the porch steps, a wasp nest clung to an attic gable, a rope swing looped down from a dying elm tree and the ground below it was scuffed soft as flour.

I think this is one of the rare cases where watching the film version improves your enjoyment of the novel. Maybe because for certain passages I could really here the narrator from the film while I was reading. I think that this might make an excellent audio book. Then again, I’ve never listened to an audio book, so what do I know.

In case you didn’t pick the basic plot up from the title of this novel ;) it revolves around the infamous Jesse James and his murderer Robert “Bob” Ford.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tags: 813.54, 9 Stars, assassin, fictional bio, historical fiction, Jesse James, murder, Robert Ford, Ron Hansen, The Assassination of Jesse James by the coward Robert F, USA - 1880's, USA - Reconstruction & Industrialisation, USA - western

Related posts