Ancient & Medieval Historical Fiction discussion

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The Coffee Trader
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MARCH 2013 (Group Read 2): The Coffee Trader by David Liss
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Laura
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Mar 03, 2013 04:46AM

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I've gotten through 12 chapters, and if you haven't read chapter 8, please don't look at the spoiler. But I was wondering if any of you (view spoiler)

I had complained somewhere that the first chapters were interesting but a little slow. Now I am within the last hundred pages, and the book is picking up, dramatically. How the Jews, Catholics and Dutch Reformers interacted is interesting to me. The influence of the English crown is something I have to study a bit.

http://www.goodreads.com/videos/39163...




Ani, more about the characters..this is why the author's method (intentional or not) works for me. (view spoiler)



I am going to contact the library today to see what the heck is going on.
It is showing as returned, but it has been a week now where it has not come to me. I am thinking maybe it is in for repair?? I don't know, but I will be trying to find out.

Terri, you can download a "sample" from Amazon and at least read the first part of the book. Or maybe another source has an ebook sample that works better for your reader? B&N?

(NB I have thought in extreme cases I might be able to start a book on the sample and then go to the paper when i get it, but I don't think I will ever end up finding a case extreme enough)


Great news. So glad you liked it!! Of course, as our regulars know, it is perfectly okay to hate or dislike a group read book. Negative comments are welcome as well as positive, but still...very happy to see group members enjoy it.

Thanks for the video, Terri. If you fly over Amsterdam today, you can still see that horseshoe shape of the old town. (I'm going at the end of March, a 21 hour layover on my way home, and I have booked an overnight so we can go to the Maritime Museeum.)
David Liss has included a bibliography and one book I would recommend for Amsterdam History is the one from



That is fascinating Laura. (That you can still see the horseshoe shape).
Would love to see some pics of the maritime museum when you get back if you want to post some in the group feel free. :)

I got busy yesterday and did not get to contact my library about the book.
I am about to check up on it now and if it is still sitting as 'allocated' then I will email them and ask 'what the heck??'

Somehow, someone got the book before me when it came back to the library. That between someone returning it and it being put away for me, someone else grabbed it and it must not have been noticed by the library.
So there is every chance I won't even get it until the 23rd march!! I am in pain! I have waited so long to read this book and when it got voted in as our group read I was really excited.
Oh well. I won't get to it immediately (unless that other person reads it quick and returns it swiftly), but i will start it this month, it just will not be until the end of the month. :(

I'd been to AMS twice and the museeum was being renovated both times. I'll get some pictures. Have you seen the website? http://www.hetscheepvaartmuseum.nl/th...


I am guessing that is the Christiaan Brunings that they say still goes to sea sometimes? That would be fun.

But I felt that some thing was missing from the book what I don't know.


Oh, that's a let down for you! I'm returning mine to the library today. We can all discuss it more once you've finished reading. I'm hoping that Imperium will be waiting for me to pick up.

Ummm, a recipe for coffee cake perhaps? ;-)

Ah, I see this is the one they call the Christiaan Brunings.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia...

Oh, that's a let down for you! I'm returning mine to the library today. We can all discuss it more once yo..."
having Coffee Trader late to come in, means I will be reading Imperium earlier this month. After I finish my current read.

Terrific! I just picked up my copy of Imperium from the library. We can talk about it the "losers" thread.

LOL...okay, but let's take some other "losers" with us!

http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/1...


And I don't drink coffee. Disagrees with me. :)
@Lia: Commodities have been manipulated since the dawn of trading. Thales of Miletus (~600BC) is said to have predicted a bumper crop of olives and reserved all the olive presses beforehand at a marginal rate, allowing him to set the rent and make his fortune.
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