Ancient & Medieval Historical Fiction discussion
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What Are You Reading Right Now? ( Hwæt béon ðu bocrædung?)

This may sound like sacrilege, but I am struggling to work up any enthusiasm for Hilary Mantel’s latest book. I almost gave up on Wolf Hall, although the sequel was easier to read. But I have just finished ‘Tombland’ by C J Sansom, and thoroughly enjoyed it. 5 stars all the way.




Here’s



I haven't tried Sansom yet but he's high on my list.
I've been on a Roman kick lately. I'm reading The Eagle's Conquest by Simon Scarrow. The second book in the series. I'm really enjoying it.


For anyone who needs it:

and the newest (coming out in September) is


Technically, but it’s a prequel!

For anyone who needs it:
[bookcover:A Column of Fire|335717..."
Thanks, Allie. I still have not figured out how to include a link to a book as I understand we're supposed to do.

Set in World War II in Poland. It's short, powerful, and brilliant.
My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


From what I understand, it is the first in a series of novels ( The Bernicia Chronicles ) set in Dark Ages Britain.


Tombland

For anyone who needs it:
[bookcover:A Column ..."
Above the comment box on the upper right side is “add book/author”. Just click on that and search book and then hit “add”.

You won’t be disappointed with the others Darian. I think it’s a really good series.
He has switched locations from Northumberland to Somerset for a new series, but kept roughly to the same era. “The Wolf of Wessex” was a good opener.




Set during The Anarchy ie the same time period of Brother Cadfael.


While Mr. Harris does write very good Historical Fiction, this book IS NOT HF. The main plot line is the election of a new Pope in the near future. As far as I know while all the main characters are fictional, including the recently departed Holy Father, the processes and procedures are acurate. I fnound the first half very engrossing, but the plot twists in the
second half put me off a bit, Over all I found this a 3+ star read.


I’m looking forward to a sequel!!

I've mapped out a sequel and written the opening couple of chapters but it will take a while I'm afraid. These sorts of books require a lot of research.

Sharon Kay Penman is an excellent author, and I find that the second reads are this reader's dream. I wrote a review on Goodreads and B&N several years ago.
BTW parts of the world are opening from the COVID 19 virus. Alas, I am not in those parts.


Slight re-opening from lockdown in Oz - my wife (a GP) is very concerned about a complacency led spike.

My review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...


The other one you mentioned

I really like Penman - I'm anxiously awaiting the Library to get her new one



I was a bit surprised by this one
(view spoiler)
The story is of a young priest who comes to remote village to conduct teh Funeral services for the village priest, who died in somewhat mysterious circumstances. The longer our young cleryman stays the more involved he becomes in determining just how and why the old priest died.
Interesting premise, but I thought the ending was too ambiguous and cut the story short.
weak 4 star rating.
I've been a bit disappointed in the last ttwo Harris novels. esp the endings.
I'm actually reading a HF novel - Jeff Shaara's newest on Pearl Harbor. It is hard for me to think of WW II as HF, but by most definitions of HF is. I can hardly believe PH took place almost 80 yrs ago.


This is the story of the year leading up to the Pearl Harbor attack. Shaara uses the US SecofState Cordell Hull and the Japanese Adm Isaroku Yamamoto to tell the high level story. The low level story is told from the view point of a Jr member of the crew of the USS Arizona, Tommy Biggs and his shipmates.
There are a few minor historical errors that drop it a half star for me, but even at that it is still a 4.5 star read, so I've rounded up.
also posted in the WWII thread
My current read is Alt Hist, so it really doesn't fit the group, but it might be of some interest to some.
.

This is the 6th volume of the main series 1632 written by Flint. The basic premise of the series is West Virginia coal mining town is sent back to the middle of the 30 yrs War in Germany and how that affects both the time line and the people.
https://www.goodreads.com/series/8501...
Flint has written 7 so called Main Line novels in thr series, but he has basiclly let any one who wants to write in the Universe, so there are tons of novels, novellas, short stories set in the universe
( edit - man, I really need to learn how to type :))


The Land Beyond the Sea and Mrs Happy brought it home for me.
I'm about 40 pages in and thoroughly enjoying it. Set in the mid 1100s, this seems to the story of Baldwin, the Leper King. (view spoiler)
also posted in the High Middle Ages thread


He has so many series under many different names hard to know which one to read. Haven't read a Templar book in a while.





I am mostly NOT reading the following selections made for me after selecting H/F, Crime, Mystery, Fantasy & war also naming 5 MALE authors as my favs....... lols
The Bleak Midwinter
A Dangerous Engagement
The Grasmere Grudge
Bella Wallis: A Victorian Mystery Quartet
With the 5th choice being Lamentation which is sound but alas I have already read which is on my library history.
Looks like I'm stuck into re-reads for the next few weeks
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Imperium (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Robert Harris (other topics)Carol McGrath (other topics)
Carol McGrath (other topics)
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Ken Follett (other topics)
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Reading the second in the fascinating ancient historical series set on Hadrian's Wall during the Roman Empire. Accurate with just enough humor to balance the battles.