Ancient & Medieval Historical Fiction discussion

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General Discussions > What Are You Reading Right Now? ( Hwæt béon ðu bocrædung?)

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message 6551: by Darcy (new)

Darcy (drokka) | 2675 comments Kimber wrote: "Darcy wrote: "Kimber wrote: "James wrote: "I just finished A Man's Word by Martin Jensen. Easy read with good humor and a great mystery. This is the third book by Jensen in this s..."

In your defence, that was 5 months ago, lots has happened since.


message 6552: by Linda (new)

Linda (ladylawyer8650) | 1702 comments The Sekhmet Bed by Lavender Ironside. I started the book yesterday, and I like it so far. It is set in 1500's B.C.E. The ancient civilizations amaze me.


message 6553: by Paula (new)

Paula Lofting (paulalofting) I have not long finished reading The Serpent Swordby Matthew Harffy. Now I am reading the secondA Clash of Kings book in Game of Thrones. I absolutely love the Game of Thrones


message 6554: by Bruce (new)

Bruce MacBain | 6 comments I'm glad you're enjoying "Odin's Child", Sherry. I look forward to seeing "Roma Amor" in print someday soon.
Bruce Macbain


message 6556: by Monica (new)

Monica | 23 comments I am currently reading Lady of the English by Elizabeth Chadwick.


message 6558: by Dawn (new)

Dawn (caveatlector) I started a series with Friday the Rabbi Slept Late and liked it so much I've begun the next book in the series right away Saturday the Rabbi Went Hungry.


message 6559: by Thomas (new)

Thomas | 12 comments Now I'm reading Lords of the North (The Saxon Stories, #3) by Bernard Cornwell Lords of the North by Bernard Cornwell. I came off loving The Pale Horseman, even more then The last Kingdom, so I'm eager to read this.


message 6560: by Linda (new)

Linda (ladylawyer8650) | 1702 comments I just now finished The Sekhmet Bed by Lavender Ironside, and I liked it. I got mixed up on my King Tuts which would not have happened had I read the author's notes before I read the book. It was free from Amazon when I got it.


message 6561: by Gretchen (new)

Gretchen (eab2012) Stayed up way too late with The Tiger Queens The Women of Genghis Khan by Stephanie Thornton last night and now I'm moving on to another of Thornton's novels The Secret History A Novel of Empress Theodora by Stephanie Thornton


message 6562: by Joe (new)

Joe Schobert | 2 comments Read a new book called The Sabrael Confession, about the constant battle between Gods angels and the devil and his demons. goes through all of time from prehistory to Jesus's birth all the way up to modern times! it was a fantastic book and I am the only one who has even read it on all of goodreads i think!


message 6565: by Darcy (last edited Jun 02, 2015 05:42AM) (new)

Darcy (drokka) | 2675 comments I'm partway through this fictionalised life of Margaret Mead, Reo Fortune, and Gregory Bateson Euphoria by Lily King Euphoria.

If you've studied anthropology (particularly in North America) probably this book won't offer anything new to you. But if you're into an inter-war historical fiction set in the South Pacific (New Guinea/Australia) and want to read about a love triangle between anthropologists, then this might be for you.

ETA: The cover of my edition isn't the one posted. GR doesn't have it on file, so I posted the most popular one.


message 6566: by Teanka (new)

Teanka | 54 comments Darcy wrote: "I'm partway through this fictionalised life of Margaret Mead, Reo Fortune, and Gregory Bateson Euphoria by Lily King"

I liked this book, it was a quick read and some of its conclusions are relevant to scientists in general, not only antropology (which admittedly is of no particular interest to me). I partly wished the book was longer and more detailed though.

I read the hardcover edition borrowed from my library with exactly the cover that you posted. I usually don't notice cover art, but this one caught my attention, so colourful!


message 6567: by happy (last edited Jun 03, 2015 09:57PM) (new)

happy (happyone) | 2782 comments Just starting the last of my Jeri Westerson's Crispin Guest marathon, it the 7th book I've read, but the 3rd in the series

The Demon's Parchment (Crispin Guest Medieval Noir, #3) by Jeri Westerson

It's been a good series - Sam Spade meets Richard II, or more acurately John of Gaunt and his son Henry Bolingbroke (the future Henry IV)


message 6568: by Linda (new)

Linda (ladylawyer8650) | 1702 comments The Secret History: A Novel of Empress Theodora by Stephanie Thornton. Good read!


message 6569: by Histolicious (new)

Histolicious Histolicious Today I have a 8 hour trainride ... so I read half of Murder on the Orient Express (Hercule Poirot, #10) by Agatha Christie

I never read a Agatha Christie Book before ...


message 6570: by Barbara (new)

Barbara | 8 comments The Gathering (Darkness Rising, #1) by Kelley Armstrong

The Gathering by Kelley Armstrong


message 6571: by Gretchen (new)

Gretchen (eab2012) Linda wrote: "The Secret History: A Novel of Empress Theodora by Stephanie Thornton. Good read!"

I'm glad you are enjoying it. I might be starting a Byzantine kick now that I'm done with that novel.


message 6572: by Margaret, Sherlockian Sheila (new)

Margaret (margyw) | 3341 comments Anell wrote: "Today I have a 8 hour trainride ... so I read half of Murder on the Orient Express (Hercule Poirot, #10) by Agatha Christie

I never read a Agatha Christie Book before ..."


That's a good one. My favourite, though is Death on the Nile


message 6573: by Allison (last edited Jun 04, 2015 03:37PM) (new)

Allison | 1704 comments I've started a past group read: The Return of Captain John Emmett by Elizabeth Speller and am really liking it.


message 6574: by Bobby (new)


message 6575: by happy (new)

happy (happyone) | 2782 comments I finished The Demon's Parchment- good and quick read.

currently reading

The Illustrious Dead: The Terrifying Story of How Typhus Killed Napoleon's Greatest Army

NF about Napoleon's Grand Armee and the invasion of Russia and how typhus destroyed it.


message 6576: by Kimber (new)


message 6577: by Erica (new)

Erica | 77 comments Just started Moloka'i by Alan Brennert


message 6578: by Bobby (new)

Bobby (bobbej) | 1375 comments Erica wrote: "Just started Moloka'i by Alan Brennert"

Read this a while back and remember being mesmerized by the descriptions and characterizations. The whole hidden story of Moloka'i and the leper colonies is fascinating.


message 6579: by Jane (new)

Jane | 3480 comments The Monsters of Templeton by Lauren Groff The Monsters of Templeton

Author's love of Cooperstown, NY [the fictional Templeton] through genealogy of members of a family.


message 6580: by Histolicious (new)

Histolicious Histolicious I started reading The Tournament by Matthew Reilly yesterday and it is AWESOME!

Murder ... Chess ... the Tudors!
OMG! I love it!


message 6581: by Mark (new)


message 6582: by Jerry (new)

Jerry Bennett | 147 comments Have just finished Lamentation. Just as good as the rest of the Shardlake series. Must try to catch up on the monthly reads though. Stormbird is next up.


message 6583: by happy (last edited Jun 08, 2015 03:37PM) (new)

happy (happyone) | 2782 comments Finished The Illustrious Dead: The Terrifying Story of How Typhus Killed Napoleon's Greatest Army - excellent look at Napoleon's invasion of Russia and the role disease in general and typhus in particular played in destroying his army and defeating him

currently reading

Waterloo The True Story of Four Days, Three Armies and Three Battles by Bernard Cornwell

Mr. Cornwell's first NF book


message 6584: by Histolicious (new)

Histolicious Histolicious I finished The Tournament by Matthew Reilly and I adore this book.

And I startet The Visitant A Venetian Ghost Story by Megan Chance (I received an ARC via Netgalley)


message 6585: by Linda (new)

Linda (ladylawyer8650) | 1702 comments 30,000 Leagues Undersea: True Tales of a Submariner and Deep Submergence Pilot by Tom Vetter. This book costs less than $5.00 on Amazon. Get it if you possibly can. I started it today and am thrilled with the author's stories.


message 6586: by Gretchen (new)

Gretchen (eab2012) Finished The Last Jew (it was alright) and I'm starting Maisie Dobbs. I am also working on Bad Girls Sirens, Jezebels, Murderesses, and Other Female Villains by Jane Yolen because my six year old found it at the library and told me I needed to read it. We were looking for books to help her identify some of the birds in our backyard.


message 6587: by happy (new)

happy (happyone) | 2782 comments I finished Cornwell's book on the Waterloo campaign

Waterloo The True Story of Four Days, Three Armies and Three Battles by Bernard Cornwell

Good introduction to the campaign and more importantly the battles that occured immediately before the main event - Quatre Bras and Ligny

Excellent illustrations, many in full color - almost coffee table book quality and maps - 4+ stars, I'll type up my more complete thoughts as I get the time.

Currently reading Jeff Shaara's new one on the American Civil War

The Fateful Lightning A Novel of the Civil War by Jeff Shaara

It's about Sherman's March to the Sea to the end of the Civil War


message 6588: by Kimber (last edited Jun 12, 2015 11:20AM) (new)

Kimber (kimberlibri) | 785 comments Blood & Beauty: The Borgias by Sarah Dunant. Really enjoying this one as a companion piece to Kate Quinn's Serpent and the Pearl duo. Quinn tells her story through Giulia Farnese, mistress of Rodrigo Borgia, and captures the female perspective perfectly. Dunant delivers a third person narrative through the eyes of several characters but concentrates mainly on Cesare. It's almost as if they conspired while writing. Where one narrative has holes the other fills in quite nicely. In B & B, you don't see more than a paragraph dedicated to Farnese's capture by the French but that's okay because it's been fully covered by Quinn in her duo. I'd highly recommend these three books being read together.

*edit* sorry...I didn't mean to actually start a review here :)


message 6589: by Teanka (new)

Teanka | 54 comments Kimber wrote: "Blood & Beauty: The Borgias by Sarah Dunant. Really enjoying this one as a companion piece to Kate Quinn's Serpent and the Pearl duo. "

I want to read this one for sure and I'm sorry I didn't manage to do it in the appropriate month when it lost in the polls. I'm glad that many people here seem to have enjoyed it. I'll try to read it some time later this year. It will be nice to compare it with the two TV series about the Borgias that I watched fairly recently.


message 6592: by Chuck (new)

Chuck | 12 comments I recently started The Empty Throne--about 100 pages in. It appears to be typical Cornwell--another great story in his Saxon Chronicles.


message 6593: by Andrew (new)

Andrew Pengelly | 51 comments I'm reading the Ides of April by Lindsay Davis. I'm a big fan of the Falcon series but much less inspired by the unhumerous and rather arrogant daughter and fellow informer Flavia Alba - it may be the first and last of this series that I indulge in
The Ides of April (Flavia Albia Mystery, #1) by Lindsey Davis


message 6594: by Gretchen (new)

Gretchen (eab2012) I feel like I have been reading Odin's Child: Book One of the Odd Tangle-Hair Saga Odin's Child Book One of the Odd Tangle-Hair Saga by Bruce MacBain forever now. The story is finally picking up but maybe that's because the protagonist finally got out of Iceland. No offense to anyone, but I found Iceland rather dull.
Also reading The Siege Winter The Siege Winter by Ariana Franklin finally!
And The Passionate Brood The Passionate Brood by Margaret Campbell Barnes - This is the cover of the copy I am reading and I have to say I love the old romanticized feel it has. Maybe I can pass it off as one of those "mom books" I'm suppose to be reading.


message 6595: by William (new)

William Carter I'm reading Zodiac unmasked though I'm looking forward to getting stuck into Cornwell's new novel.


message 6596: by Victor (new)

Victor Bruneski | 124 comments I'm reading a lot of Historical Non-Fiction now, but what the heck, I'll post it here.

I just read The Devil in the White City Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America by Erik Larson by Erik Larson. It's about Dr. H.H.Holmes as well as the work that went in to creating the 1893 Chicago Worlds Fair.
My review ===> https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

Now i'm reading Operation Paperclip The Secret Intelligence Program that Brought Nazi Scientists to America by Annie Jacobsen by Annie Jacobsen


message 6597: by Kimber (last edited Jun 21, 2015 06:38PM) (new)

Kimber (kimberlibri) | 785 comments I took a break from the Italian Renaissance and picked up A Dirty Job A Dirty Job (Grim Reaper, #1) by Christopher Moore by Christopher Moore. I'm a sucker for a good satire and he's one of the best. I'm planning on skimming the Wiki on Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice and then picking up Moore's sequel to Fool Fool by Christopher Moore - The Serpent of Venice The Serpent of Venice by Christopher Moore . Amusing myself in the meantime with a fun little read The Secret History of the Pink Carnation The Secret History of the Pink Carnation (Pink Carnation, #1) by Lauren Willig


message 6598: by Allison (last edited Jun 21, 2015 07:19PM) (new)

Allison | 1704 comments ^^I like the Pink Carnation series. Usually not my kind of read but they're fun and mindless. If you can get past the heroine in the first book, the rest of the girls aren't nearly as dumb :)


message 6599: by Mark (new)

Mark | 1885 comments Reading sci fi/cyberpunk Nexus (Nexus, #1) by Ramez Naam


message 6600: by Kimber (new)

Kimber (kimberlibri) | 785 comments Allie wrote: "^^I like the Pink Carnation series. Usually not my kind of read but they're fun and mindless. If you can get past the heroine in the first book, the rest of the girls aren't nearly as dumb :)"

Lol thank you Allie..I was thinking that. She is pretty flighty.


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