Dorothy Dunnett fans discussion
Book Discussions
>
What else are you reading?

Together with another person in the All About Books group we are planning a Lymond re-readalong in 2014.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Anybody cares to join us??
Elisa wrote: "What else are you reading? Well, Lymond again!
Together with another person in the All About Books group we are planning a Lymond re-readalong in 2014.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/......"
Nice!
Together with another person in the All About Books group we are planning a Lymond re-readalong in 2014.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/......"
Nice!

Together with another person in the All About Books group we are planning a Lymond re-readalong in 2014.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/......"
Ah... so tempting, Elisa! And yet can I allow Lymond to swallow up my life for the second time in eighteen months? *Thinks about it* Hmm. I may very well be tempted. :-)


Incredibly well written, meticulously researched books about the mediaeval period.
Her focus tends to be on the lives of sting women, and her latest on The Borgias is mesmerising.
I am currently coming to the end of "Sacred Hearts", set in an Italian convent in the 15th Century. Intricate, intriguing and every bit as full of (admittedly female) derring do as DDs books.

However, once you get to know them, sting women works just as well!!
Thank you for noticing.
Christine
Christine wrote: "Oops! Should be 'strong women'.
However, once you get to know them, sting women works just as well!!
Thank you for noticing.
Christine"
Oh, that makes more sense. Thanks.
However, once you get to know them, sting women works just as well!!
Thank you for noticing.
Christine"
Oh, that makes more sense. Thanks.


Together with another person in the All About Books group we are planning a Lymond re-readalong in 2014.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/......"
I'd love to join you too.

For me the beginning of 2014 will be great because I'll start re-reading Lymond :-)
We are quite a merry bunch of fanatics and newbies embarking in this task and we will discuss Francis' doings here:
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Feel free to join at any point in the discussion, even if you are not re-reading the series!
Elisa wrote: "Hi everyone! First of all I hope you all had a lovely Christmas, and that your year end+beginninng will be nice as well.
For me the beginning of 2014 will be great because I'll start re-reading Ly..."
Cool! Welcome and thanks for providing the link.
For me the beginning of 2014 will be great because I'll start re-reading Ly..."
Cool! Welcome and thanks for providing the link.

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Feel free to join at any point in the discussion, even if you are not re-reading the series!"
Elisa, I have some questions regarding how you typically handle discussion there.
I looked around and didn't see any kind of schedule but without one how do you avoid spoilers while you discuss? From what I could tell, it seems as though people simply post general impressions of the book mostly after they've finished, which doesn't seem like a lot of discussion to me. I'm not trying to be critical, I realize what works for one group doesn't necessarily work for another, but I am wondering how your discussions are set up? And whether it will work for some of us who are used to in-depth discussion as we read?
Katherine wrote: "Elisa wrote: "We are quite a merry bunch of fanatics and newbies embarking in this task and we will discuss Francis' doings here:
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Feel free to join at any..."
It's not been consistent in this group, and I agree that in dept discussions are few and far between, but my suggestion has always been to create 'spoilers' and 'no spoilers' threads.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
Feel free to join at any..."
It's not been consistent in this group, and I agree that in dept discussions are few and far between, but my suggestion has always been to create 'spoilers' and 'no spoilers' threads.
Laura wrote: "In my opinion the Outlander books are pretty much soft porn. Dunnett is literature."
I agree.
I agree.


Mary Renault is wonderful. Different from Dunnett, but splendid, wonderfully written, and moving.


Oh, do read Patrick O'Brien instead. The real Napoleonic Wars and no errors in the sailing department. I've always thought of him as the male Jane Austen, with guns and spies... (And honestly, if you think about it, why do the dragons put up with the humans?)

Oh, thank you for the recommendation! I will put him on the list to read after I've finished this series!



I agree, love Mary Renault and also I agree about Sharon Penman and the Welsh series. Very enjoyable. Good portrait of King John too, I thought. I have also very much enjoyed Elizabeth Chadwick (the British author not the American EC), in particular the William Marshall books. I think she writes very accessibly, quite like Sharon Penman.


Hard to tell Chadwick and Penman apart, but they certainly don't have Dame Dunnett's fine eye for detail, and wicked turn of phrase.
Temeraire is fun, but is hardlly historical fiction. Not even in the discussion.
Patrick O'Brien is supposed to be top of his game, but I've tried again and again, and just can't get into them.
Mary Renault, IMO, doesn't hold up (from adolescent love to second half of my century now). And Anya Seton doesn't do it for me at all.
So here's some fun alternatives:
1. The Religion - Willocks - history is good (Siege of Malta- a few years after DD's Disorderly Knights), and characters, though not Lymond or Niccolo deep, are terrific and villians are as good as Graham and Simon.
2. Long Ships - Bengsten - history reasonable insofar as whatever Vikings were up to, and hypochondriac Vikings are very funny.
3. The Bruce Trilogy - Trantor - gets a bit long, but very good.
4. Do not dismiss Georgette Heyer. You can learn a good bit about Regency England in these delightful stories. Looking up the clothes and barouches (etc etc) is entertaining.
5. And a slightly off recommendation which I don't see anywhere here - Guy Gavriel Kay writes alternate history - much better than Novik's Temeraire. GGK's history is pretty accurate actually - but he veers enough so that he can put you in the head of, say, El Cid, rather than creating a person watching El Cid. He's done some AMAZING books - El Cid in Iberia (Lions of Al Rassan), Vikings (Last Light of the Sun), Song Dynasty (River of Stars). I'm very much looking forward to his forthcoming one on renaissance Europe (Children of Earth and SKy). His books will keep you on the internet checking history. Really an amazing sensibility and delicate, but punishing anyway, touch.

I read Here Be Dragons right around the time I was also reading Barbara Erskine's Lady of Hay and Susan Howatch's Penmarric. It occurred to me only toward the end that I had been reading a book with a character more or less patterned on King John, one with a character who was evidently a reincarnation of King John, and one in which a character was King John. Both Howatch and Penman present a more historically accurate (and more sympathetic toward John) picture of the fate of Prince Arthur than I acquired in my teens, and Penman actually manages to make John heroic in that episode. Strongly recommend it! Howatch's 20th century John, called Jan Yves, is also quite sympathetic, and Hay's novel, near the end, has another character ask a question that made me laugh out loud. (And Penman has her main character make an admission about John that made me smile with recognition.) So read on!

A male colleague told me about the Patrick O'Brien series, which made me think of Horatio Hornblower, and then I forgot the author's name and stumbled across Bernard Cornwell by mistake--but instead of reading (listening to, actually) his Napoleonic series, I started the King Alfred one. My husband and I found the main character so awful that we gave up in the middle of the second volume!

jrendocrine - I absolutely agree about Guy Gavriel Kay. I loved River of Stars and Under Heaven.
I'm sorry you didn't enjoy Patrick O'Brien, jrendocrine. MaryC, please do give POB himself a chance. I find him exceedingly funny generally and then surprisingly moving at certain points.
I also agree about the Temeraire series, but they are definitely fun for what they are!
Hilary Mantel, to me, best carries on in DD's tradition of making you feel like you are right there with a real person. Sadly, I'm beginning to wonder if the third Wolf Hall book is ever coming out.
I've just finished "Story of Land and Sea" by Katy Simpson Smith, which has some excellent historical details and gets a historical mindset very well, I think. The story is very bleak in general, although I found a hopeful note at the end that some critics seem to have discounted (or missed).

I liked Willoks, "The Religion." Ultra violent and great charac.
No one Mentioned Bernard Cornwall. His King Arthur Series is amazing. Great speculative, historialized (is that a word?), version of Arthur. His Agincourt is a also a great one off. And his Richard Shape series is excellent for Napoleonic fans.
"The Serpent and the Moon." by Princess Michael of Kent, is a great version of the Love triangle between Katherine DeMedici, Henry and Diane de Poitiers.
Patrick O'Brien is excellent, but his sailing jargon and technical understanding of sailing gets long for me.
IF you can find them, four xcellent books by Dudley Pope are, Buccaneer, Admiral, Galleon, and Corsair. Called, collectively, the Yorke series. Takes place in the 1650's, during the time of Cromwell's England, Yet set in the waters of Barbados and the surrounding islands. A different perspective on this troubling time, plus a fun adventure. I have not Read his Ramage series but I hear they are good as well (more Napoleonic era stuff).
Dame Dunnet is still the reigning Queen, as far as I am concerned but these are some good reads as well. Enjoy.

Another fantasy author who is a Dunnett fan is Ellen Kushner. She wrote Swordspoint, and a sequel, with a lavish flair - she has a background in radio and drama, and is currently immersed in a serial, Tremontaine.
The charm of the Patrick O'Brien books is not really the history or the naval research (he actually was no sailor, and believe it or not that shows.) Many people dig in to these books with the wrong insight - they are not truly action stories - what drives their charm is the relationships between the very quirky characters; the humor is subtle, and the odd contrasts and strange turns of their friendships is the core of the story. So if you try these with the understanding that you are reading a very subtle character study and interaction, then you will discover the charm.

And yes of course Mantel, and I know she'll finish what she started, we'll have to see Cromwell to the end.
Other recommendations here just great. One I have for die hard Dunnetts is to listen to them-- most Niccolo are 3.99 Whispersync. Pretty great for 28 h listening while driving to work!



You are thinking of the Last Kingdom (now a series on BBC America). This is called the Warlord Series. Beginning with, "The Winter King," "Enemy of God," and finally "Excaliber: a novel of Arthur.


The Arthur series is The Warlord Series. The characters are diverse, and show many shades of gray. All flawed, making many mistakes along the way.

I agree, Eileen. The Audible narrator for the Lymond chronicles get tiresome, quickly. Does great accents but is very...one note. Have not tried the Nicollo series on audible.

I think the narrator for Niccolo is fantastic! I have heard 6 of them so far, with other books in between on drives (Knausgaard!) Other family members (we are a Niccolo kind of family) have also listened, and love.
I haven't listened to any of Lymond. Probably because best to read Lymond on hand held so I can search for medieval french poetry translations, etc.

Did you get beyond Game of Kings in the Audible format? The narrator for the rest of the series is much better than the awful narrator of GoK who makes Lymond sound like an 18th c fop.

You're right, the narrator of the first volume, GoK, is terrible! So skip that one, just read it on paper or ebook. But after you've read that one, the rest of the audiobooks are excellent, narrated by Andrew Napier. He sounds just like my imagining of a young well born 16th century Scottish gentleman.

Mary wrote: You're right, the narrator of the first volume, GoK, is terrible! So skip that one, just read it on paper or ebook. But after you've read that one, the rest of the audiobooks are excellent, narrated by Andrew Napier. He sounds just like my imagining of a young well born 16th century Scottish gentleman.
Well, I'm glad there's a consensus on the GoK narrator! I did actually try multiple volumes in audiobook format, but Andrew Napier wasn't quite to my taste, either. I was only listening to samples, but I thought it was telling when I couldn't bear to listen to a five minute sample, so I didn't buy/borrow any of them.
If we don't get a film or television adaptation of some kind in the next few years (say, 5-10) perhaps there will be a new set of audiobooks! Ideally multi-cast, read by actors young and old enough to pull off the wide variety of characters DD gifted us. That's my hope, anyway.


Thanks so much for these recommendations. I've bookmarked them and will hunt them down when I finish my current Lymond re-read. The Religion sounds really interesting. I've read that that DD was a Nigel Tranter fan and I knew that GGKay refereced her as an influence too. I do love Heyer and was so impressed when a chap in a second-hand bookstore recommended Jane Austen and Heyer to my god-daughter who's reading well beyond her years!
Books mentioned in this topic
His Majesty's Dragon (other topics)His Majesty's Dragon (other topics)
His Majesty's Dragon (other topics)
The Far Pavilions (other topics)
Night Train to Memphis (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Naomi Novik (other topics)Naomi Novik (other topics)
Naomi Novik (other topics)
Elizabeth Peters (other topics)
Janny Wurts (other topics)
More...
I especially look forward to checking out The Thief by Megan Whalen Turner, The Religion by Tom Willocks, The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell, the Lord Peter Wimsey series by Dorothy L. Sayers, and the novels by Elizabeth Peters. I'd seen Elizabeth Peters recommended for people who liked the Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes series by Laurie R. King (which is good but not close to Dorothy Dunnett's writing), so it's nice to see her recommended again.