Ancient & Medieval Historical Fiction discussion

This topic is about
Raiders from the North
Monthly Group Reads
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APRIL 2014 (Group Read 2): Raiders from the North by Alex Rutherford


I am not liking it that much. It's not dreadful but I feel that I'm being talked to instead of being immersed into a fascinating culture.
I am tired of the.....hold on I need to find the right term......exposition. There seems to be a whole lot of Babur explaining things to himself instead of actual storyline. Too much info dump and not enough incorporation into the story for me.
It also does not help that I have no connection with Babur. I don't feel anything for him but apathy.
I want to be transported and it's not happening.



So I will be able to join in the discussion this month after all.

You will be happy to know that he's only a pre-teen for a quarter of the book!

I can't comment on how plausible it is for Babur to attack men twice his age. That may indeed be modern artistic license. But I would note that in his time, a boy became a man at 15, and 30 was already relatively old for a warrior. Babur himself died at 47, or thereabouts, and he had probably begun his military training at 5. So it may be less implausible than it appears from our perspective. People could live into their 80s, then as now, but it was far less common.

I'm about a third of the way through. Babur has just managed to loose both his thrones.

Shall check out your review once I have read the book.
Sounds feasible to me. I mean, there were 15 year old kids(lying about age) in WW1 and all the wars before that. I guess I will have to wait until I read it to see how the author dealt with a child killing mature warriors in a plausible way.

You will be happy to know that he's only a pre-teen for a quarter of the book!"
err.i forgot that there would probably be child characters in this one. I am glad to hear that his child life is not dragged out to take up large portions of the book.


You will be happy to know that he's only a pre-teen for a quarter of ..."
You don't really notice the fact he's a child, or rather, an adolescent, at the beginning.

Wasn't Joan of Arc around that age too?



Brilliant. that makes me happy. :)

Do you mean ebook? Thanks for the offer, my dear friend, but I am a paper only reader. :)

Agreed, I can believe his personal combat skills may be exemplary even at this age, but the command elements seem a little far fetched. That said, I am still enjoying the story.

I wouldn't sink the book for that alone, of course. On the whole the authors do a pretty good job. But since people here like accuracy, I thought I'd mention it.
The other thing is that even though it's tempting to paint Babur as an uneducated hill-dwelling chieftain, the evidence of his diary is that he wasn't quite that unsophisticated. He talks about Persian poetry (and even includes some verses of his own). Timur, too, was a lover of literature and history as well as a guy who would cleave a dozen skulls before breakfast without turning a hair. That combination is precisely why I find them fascinating. Sure, Babur was no Shakespeare (the poetry reads as pretty primitive today), but he wasn't singing to the sheep, either. In fact, he rather looked down on his raucous and uncultured nomadic relatives. He'd have been appalled to discover that their name (Mughal) became attached to his dynasty....
Sceadugenga, your point about Babur's sangfroid on his first excursion is well taken. I quite agree.

Not sure if it's the book, or the fact the last book I read was "The Gospel of Loki" where the main character is extremely real and powerful. Barbur is looking a little wet and dull in comparison.

Heavens no. Don't go away and do that! All viewpoints are valid around here if they are respectful to others.... and you were respectful. :-)
I enjoyed reading your thoughts.

I appreciate learning this, C.P. Good info! This is why I enjoy the group reads. To learn from other readers.

Do you mean ebook? Thanks for the offer, my dear friend, but I am a paper only reader. :)"
Use to be that way until my iPad happened in my life. Since my honeymoon I haven't have such a great time in my life. The offer still stands for the future.


'stage right--Babur enters
BABUR: We will take them by surprise. Oh no, they saw us. We have lost the elemenent of surprise.'
He was lucky in love and in his first born son. When he lost a kingdom, another would be given to him (that is an understatement). He showed his hand at the wrong times. However, near the book's end, he learned from his mistakes, and I thought, 'Finally!' He made good use of the cannon and gun powder. I want to read his diary on the chance that
his personality lurks within his own words.

I'll give It to You that Babur is somehow 2 dimensional or maybe He was following the Alexander route and He was in love with Baburi (Don't know) but I have read worst in the past. Almost done with this book.

I really didn't find Babur that two-dimensional—perhaps because I was more familiar with him and his culture going in. But I am finding others' reactions to him interesting.



When Andrew says 'it reads like a play' I know the kind of writing he/you are talking about.
Time will tell.

My thoughts exactly Margaret, Are You going to read part II? I need some encouragement to do that.

My thoughts exactly Margaret, Are You going to read part II? I need some encouragement to do that."
Ah no, probably not. It wasn't a good enough read to encourage down that path.




My thoughts exactly Margaret, Are You going to read part II? I need some encouragement to do that."
If part 2 is about Babur's son, my husband has told me about Humayun's reign and I'm not impressed, so I'm probably going to skip the rest of the trilogy. If part 3 is about Akbar, that might be interesting.

Book 3 is Akbar
Book 4 is Jahangir
Book 5 is Shah Jahan who built the Taj Mahal
Books mentioned in this topic
Brothers At War (other topics)Genghis: Birth of an Empire (other topics)
The Baburnama: Memoirs of Babur, Prince and Emperor (other topics)
One for Sorrow (other topics)
Babur the Tiger (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Madhulika Liddle (other topics)Alex Rutherford (other topics)
Alex Rutherford (other topics)
Yes, lots. It follows The Baburnama: Memoirs of Babur, Prince and Emperor very closely in terms of characters and plot, but it does fill in the sensory detail—and does a good job. I'm about ¾ through and enjoying it very much, although I have to slow down now to tackle something else (which is why I started early).