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What Are You Reading Right Now? ( Hwæt béon ðu bocrædung?)
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Terri, Wyrd bið ful aræd
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Nov 11, 2013 05:48PM

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Mel Gibson's accent was an insult to Scots everywhere!"
And how authentic was the face half blue and half unpainted? That bugged the heck out of me.

Mel Gibson's accent was an insult to Scots everywhere!"
And how authentic was the face ha..."
Looked and sounded more like a football supporter rather than a "freedom fighter".
It was the lurv affair with Princess Isabella that REALLY peed me off. Talk about playing fast and loose with history. :p

Referred to with great condemnation in my family as "Bravefart".

Referred to with great condemnation in my family as "Bravefart"."
In mine it was Gravelark

Referred to with great condemnation in my family as "Bravefart"."
In mine it was Gravelark"
I like it! :D

It is very cute, actually. ;-)
Dawn, the opera is based on Alexander Pushkin's novel in verse. There's a ballet, too, but that's much later (1970s?). It's quite wonderful, actually—not at all as intimidating as "novel in verse" makes it sound.




Hmmmm, sounds tempting then. Russian and an Opera.....I'll have to add it.




Good to see someone from the group read Stigmata. I'll check out your review, Sherry.

Now I need to find the opera and listen to it as well. You tube should have it, surprising how many full operas are on there.



Yes, the music is glorious. I'd love to hear Te Kanawa's Tatiana. Lucky you, Bryn!

Now I need to find th..."
Also, in Act II is Lensky's Aria, "Kuda, Kuda" which is very famous, plus there is a polonaise at the ball. Eugene Onegin

You don't only sing along w/ Mme. Larina and her daughters making jam? :)

Next on the list is The Blood Crows, as Mr. Scarrow was giving a talk at the Roman Army Museum when I visited Hadrian's Wall and I managed to get a signed copy. Should be a fun read now that the 'boys are back in town'!


Started



Started



Jane - interesting bit of trivia I once read about Richard II - he was the one who invented the handkerchief. I don't know if it is true or not, and it did make me wonder what did people use before that (their sleeves?). Maybe your new book will mention it.


Mothers everywhere are grateful!


Yes, they used their sleeves.
Richard II introduced the handkerchief into England via his young French bride. The hankie was invented in France.
Mark wrote: "Derek wrote: "
Shield of Thunder"
Cool."
Well...Lord of the Silver Bow was extremely cool! So I figured it was about time I got to book 2.

Cool."
Well...Lord of the Silver Bow was extremely cool! So I figured it was about time I got to book 2.


Ah--no wonder I haven't found it in the book yet--where I am, Richard's still married to Anne of Bohemia.


Well, I definitely appreciate adding this to my ever-growing store of trivia!

I finished Norman Mailer's Ancient Evenings with severely mixed feelings.

Well, let us know how the two Lionhearts compare. I've read the Penman one, which was well researched and written, but I felt did not really explain Richard.
Apparently many of the men who knew Richard wrote about him, and the author had many primary sources to go to for the book. But the book is told from the points of view of the people around him, never from the man himself. Kind of like describing the sun from the POV of the planets.
I hope her next book on Richard tells the story from his POV.

Always a dangerous move reading two books on the same thing one after the other. Hope it works out. :)

I have to say, the translation in the Thorvald Steen seems awful. It's written in an impressionistic way and my guess is the translation is having trouble with that.

I tried that with two Arthurian books by different authors right after the other. That did NOT work out for me.

I did it for Helen Hollick's novel, The Forever Queen and Patricia Bracewell's Shadow on the Crown, both about Emma of Normandy. I thought they both covered the woman and her life pretty well. Helen's book was a bit grittier, more down to earth than Pat's book. Pat's gave a more polished image of life in that time.
It may have helped that neither book needed to be translated, and that they were both written within a few years (months?) of each other. Sometimes books that were written a while back may have been written in a dated style, but that was not the case with these.



This is a dark look at Richard 1 and I understand the SKP isn't, so they're in contrast.

I also wasted a huge amount of time talking sense back into my iPad after I allowed it to upgrade iBooks, only to discover that this version was the one that introduced a "lovely new design" that turned Sleeping Beauty into an ugly crone. But I did eventually persuade my computer to revert to the older version. So now I can go back to reading....

Feel free to add your thoughts on the group read thread Alicja. The threads are never locked for perpetual participation :D
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

This is a dark look at Richard 1 and I understand the SKP isn't, so the..."
SKP did a tremendous amount of research on Richard, and it shows in the book. She said she approached the book with a negative impression of Richard, but ended feeling positive about the man.

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