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 9501: by Pamela (new)

Pamela | 5 comments Arrows of Fury (Empire, #2) by Anthony Riches
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.


message 9502: by Jerry (new)

Jerry Bennett | 147 comments My father taught English at what was called a ‘secondary modern’ school in the UK, and regularly tried to enthuse his students by using extracts from authors like Raymond Chandler, Ian Fleming and John le Carre. It must have worked for some, as they went on to study English at a higher level. He also loved history, something he passed on to me, so Shakespeare and Walter Scott became firm favourites in my later school years. I also remember him passing me a library book and saying “I think you will enjoy this.” It was The Iron King by Maurice Druon, and it remains a benchmark for quality HF in my mind.

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.


message 9503: by May (new)

May (mayzie) | 968 comments TOMBLAND is next for me!!


message 9504: by Allison (last edited Mar 13, 2020 11:52AM) (new)

Allison | 1704 comments One of my favorite booktubers is doing a “Mantel in March” readalong. After wanting to throw Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel off a very tall building, I didn’t think I’d ever want to read the sequel. But he’s got me a little excited for Bring Up the Bodies by Hilary Mantel anyway. The Mirror & the Light (Thomas Cromwell Trilogy #3) by Hilary Mantel will have a holds list from here to China! Even longer now that a lot of libraries in my state are closing for 2 weeks :(

Here’s Tombland (Matthew Shardlake, #7) by C.J. Sansom for anyone who wants it.


message 9505: by Henry (new)

Henry Millstein | 17 comments Just finished A Column of Fire by Ken Follett. Wonderful book. Can't wait to read his newest in the Kingsbridge series.


message 9506: by Laura Tenfingers (last edited Mar 15, 2020 07:15AM) (new)

Laura Tenfingers | 178 comments I'm looking forward to Mantel's new one. Wolf Hall was definitely going to irritate people, no doubt. I somehow was able to stick it out until that crazy thing she did with PoVs made sense and then I loved it. I'm curious to see what she's done with this one.

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.


message 9507: by Linda (new)

Linda (ladylawyer8650) | 1702 comments I just finished a re-read of Sarum: The Novel of England by Edward Rutherfurd and Harvesting the Heart by Jodi Picoult. Both were good books. Harvest the Heart was a three star read while Sarum was a solid four stars.


message 9508: by Allison (last edited Mar 15, 2020 08:09AM) (new)

Allison | 1704 comments Henry wrote: "Just finished A Column of Fire by Ken Follett. Wonderful book. Can't wait to read his newest in the Kingsbridge series."

For anyone who needs it:

A Column of Fire (Kingsbridge, #3) by Ken Follett

and the newest (coming out in September) is The Evening and the Morning by Ken Follett


message 9509: by Marilyn (new)

Marilyn (mbk1857) | 415 comments I have discovered John Grisham, finally. He is good!


message 9510: by May (new)

May (mayzie) | 968 comments Allie, is there a 4th in the series? I did not know that! Yea!!


message 9511: by Marty (new)

Marty (martymill) | 65 comments Social distancing and just started Lincoln in the Bardo. Not sure how I feel about it yet.


message 9512: by Allison (new)

Allison | 1704 comments May wrote: "Allie, is there a 4th in the series? I did not know that! Yea!!"

Technically, but it’s a prequel!


message 9513: by Henry (new)

Henry Millstein | 17 comments Allie wrote: "Henry wrote: "Just finished A Column of Fire by Ken Follett. Wonderful book. Can't wait to read his newest in the Kingsbridge series."

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.


message 9514: by Tamara (new)

Tamara Agha-Jaffar I recently read A Meal In Winter by Hubert Mingarelli, translated from the French by Sam Taylor.
Set in World War II in Poland. It's short, powerful, and brilliant.

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


message 9515: by James (new)

James Martin (jconmartin) | 1 comments Immersing myself into The Mirror & the Light. Enjoying it!


message 9516: by Adrian (new)

Adrian Deans (adriandeans) | 293 comments I thought Wolf Hall was amazing. One of the best books I've read in years. The sequel was excellent but I'm almost dreading reading the latest - being so invested in Cromwell and knowing what happens to him.


message 9517: by Darian (new)

Darian  (scholarofthenorth) | 3 comments I have just finished reading The Serpent Sword by Matthew Harffy. The novel revolves around a young Saxon man named Beobrand and is set in Great Britain during the early 7th century AD as the Angles, Saxons and Jutes fought for dominance of the island from the native Britons. I liked the book for its even pace, developed characters and immersive writing, especially on the setting and old Anglo-Saxon culture. Good piece of historical fiction!

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


message 9518: by May (new)

May (mayzie) | 968 comments Finally reading TOMBLAND by C J Sansom. I am enjoying it immensely, but it is a huge book. Really wish I had ordered it for my Kindle!!


message 9519: by Bobby (new)

Bobby (bobbej) | 1375 comments May wrote: "Finally reading TOMBLAND by C J Sansom. I am enjoying it immensely, but it is a huge book. Really wish I had ordered it for my Kindle!!"

Tombland


message 9520: by Bobby (new)

Bobby (bobbej) | 1375 comments Henry wrote: "Allie wrote: "Henry wrote: "Just finished A Column of Fire by Ken Follett. Wonderful book. Can't wait to read his newest in the Kingsbridge series."

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”.


message 9521: by Jerry (new)

Jerry Bennett | 147 comments Darian wrote: "I have just finished reading The Serpent Sword by Matthew Harffy. The novel revolves around a young Saxon man named Beobrand and is set in Great Britain during the..."

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.


message 9522: by Inna (new)

Inna (innas) | 5 comments May wrote: "Finally reading TOMBLAND by C J Sansom. I am enjoying it immensely, but it is a huge book. Really wish I had ordered it for my Kindle!!" It is excellent. I do not like everything by Sansom, but this one I definitely do.


message 9523: by May (new)

May (mayzie) | 968 comments Glad you are enjoying it!


message 9524: by Selkis (new)

Selkis | 3 comments I'm reading The Pale Horseman by Bernard Cornwell, which is the second book in the Last Kingdom series. I am enjoying it as much as the first book and can't stop reading. Cornwell could become one of my favourite authors.


message 9525: by Geoff (new)

Geoff | 32 comments Just finished Faithful Unto Death by Sarah Hawkswood , book 6 in the Bradcote and Catchpoll Mysteries. For those like a good medieval murder mystery the series is worth checking out.
Set during The Anarchy ie the same time period of Brother Cadfael.


message 9526: by happy (last edited May 18, 2020 04:24PM) (new)

happy (happyone) | 2782 comments I just finished Robert Harris'

Conclave by Robert Harris

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.


message 9527: by May (new)

May (mayzie) | 968 comments I am reading FIGHTING MAN by Adrian Deans... truly enjoying the opening chapters!!


message 9528: by Terri, Wyrd bið ful aræd (new)

Terri | 19576 comments Don't forget to leave your thoughts on any histroical fiction you all are reading, in the era threads so people can find your feedback and views whenever they are in that thread.


message 9529: by May (new)

May (mayzie) | 968 comments Just finished THE FIGHTING MAN by Adrian Deans. I really enjoyed it. His characters are engaging, the plot leading up to The Battle of Hastings is believable.
I’m looking forward to a sequel!!


message 9530: by happy (new)


message 9531: by Adrian (new)

Adrian Deans (adriandeans) | 293 comments Thanks very much May. My normal policy is not to respond to comments on forums unless asked a question, but I may as well say there are still a couple of copies available in my giveaway.

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.


message 9532: by Linda (new)

Linda (ladylawyer8650) | 1702 comments I finished a re-read of When Christ and His Saints Slept, and it was a five star read. Again. The time is in the 11th century. Maude a Stephen were vying for the English Crown to the extent that God must have looked down on Earth and thought, "What is going on down there?" Because things were in turmoil, Christ and his Saints must have been asleep.

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.


message 9533: by Linda (new)

Linda (ladylawyer8650) | 1702 comments I am re-reading Time and Chance by Sharon Kay Penman. Thus far the book has grabbed me.


message 9534: by Linda (new)

Linda (ladylawyer8650) | 1702 comments When Christ and His Saints Slept. I am forever forgetting to mention that for nineteen years there was anarchy, crops did not grow, there was hunger in the land. Because of these and other bad conditions, the people openly asked if Christ and his saints slept?


message 9535: by Adrian (new)

Adrian Deans (adriandeans) | 293 comments They also asked something similar during the reign of King John.

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


message 9536: by Tamara (new)

Tamara Agha-Jaffar I read The Familiars by Stacey Halls set in 17thC England. I'd read some positive reviews about the book, so I was expecting it to be good. I was disappointed. Perhaps it just wasn't for me.

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


message 9537: by Bobby (new)


message 9538: by happy (new)

happy (happyone) | 2782 comments Linda wrote: "I am re-reading Time and Chance by Sharon Kay Penman. Thus far the book has grabbed me."

Time and Chance (Henry II & Eleanor of Aquitaine, #2) by Sharon Kay Penman Time and Chance

The other one you mentioned

When Christ and His Saints Slept (Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine, #1) by Sharon Kay Penman


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

The Land Beyond the Sea by Sharon Kay Penman


message 9539: by happy (last edited Jun 08, 2020 03:14PM) (new)

happy (happyone) | 2782 comments I just finished Robert Harris's latest

The Second Sleep by Robert Harris

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.

To Wake the Giant A Novel of Pearl Harbor by Jeff Shaara


message 9540: by happy (last edited Jun 17, 2020 05:39PM) (new)

happy (happyone) | 2782 comments I finished To Wake the Giant: A Novel of Pearl Harbor. It's up to Shaara's standards. There is a good mix of high and low level characters and as always, Shaara brings his story to life.

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.
.
1636 The Ottoman Onslaught by Eric Flint

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 :))


message 9541: by Marilyn (new)

Marilyn (mbk1857) | 415 comments I just finished reading “Black Hawk Down” by Mark Bowden about the U.S. involvement in Mogadishu, Somalia. The movie was exciting but the book grabs ahold of you in such a way that I doubt that the images it evoked in me will ever go away. The consequences of battle touches on all service men regardless of nationality.


message 9542: by happy (new)

happy (happyone) | 2782 comments The library recieved their copy of Sharon Kay Penman's newest

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


message 9543: by Rafael (last edited Jun 24, 2020 08:35PM) (new)

Rafael da Silva (morfindel) | 152 comments I started today to read The Empty Throne by Bernard Cornwell.


message 9544: by Alice (new)

Alice | 74 comments I am reading The Templar by Paul Doherty The Templar (Templars, #1) by Paul Doherty

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.


message 9545: by happy (new)

happy (happyone) | 2782 comments I still plugging away on The Land Beyond the Sea. I really liked the way she handled Baldwin finding out he has leprosy. IRL, (view spoiler)


message 9546: by Marilyn (new)

Marilyn (mbk1857) | 415 comments I am reading “Helier Skelter” by Vincent Bugliosi, the Deputy District Attorney who tried Charles Manson and some of his Family Members for the Tate-LaBianca Murders. Though it happened 50 years ago I wasn’t all that tuned in on the trial. This book that Bugliosi wrote about his experiences in gathering the evidence and subsequent trial is absolutely spellbinding! Highly recommend this book.


message 9547: by Kathryn (new)

Kathryn Bashaar | 4 comments I'm reading the new Vietnam historical novel, The Mountains Sing. I'm finding it a little hard to get into. The writing is pretty plodding, so far. I'm wondering if it's because English isn't the author's first language. I'll stick with it a little longer, though.


message 9548: by Kathryn (new)

Kathryn Bashaar | 4 comments Linda wrote: "I finished a re-read of When Christ and His Saints Slept, and it was a five star read. Again. The time is in the 11th century. Maude a Stephen were vying for the English Crown to the extent that Go..." I'm a Sharon Key Penman fan, too.


message 9550: by Andy (new)

Andy | 1510 comments So...... (jus for Allie! ; )

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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