Historical Fiction Challenge 2012 discussion

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What are you reading for the Challenge?

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message 51: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Yay! I made it to Book #20. A Lady Cyclist's Guide to Kashgar by Suzanne Joinson This book has dual, intertwined stories; 1923 Kashgar and modern day London. I didn't care much for it. Oh, well... For more, see my review on my blog: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201...


message 52: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Read Book #21: The Winter Queen (Erast Fandorin Mysteries, #1) by Boris Akunin Thanks, Wanda, for recommending this one! A mystery series set in Russia in the 1870s. Erast Fandorin, the youngest member of the Moscow Police CID, is allowed to investigate the public suicide of a young aristocrat. What he uncovers puts him in over his head. A really great read for historical fiction mystery fans. See my blog for more: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201...


message 53: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Finished book #22 "The House of Velvet and Glass" by Katherine Howe. Set in Boston, 3 years after the sinking of the Titanic, it follows the Allston family as they try to cope with the loss of Mrs. Allston and the youngest daughter. Be prepared for a slightly dark side with seances, opium dens and an expulsion from Harvard. All the surviving members of the Allstons have their secrets! See more on my blog: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201... The House of Velvet and Glass She also wrote "The Physick Book of Deliverance Dane", a terrific split-time book about the Salem witch craft trials.


message 54: by Peggy (last edited Jul 09, 2012 02:08PM) (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Book #23 is a period murder mystery: A Simple Murder by Eleanor Kuhns . It's your standard murder mystery. What makes this more interesting is the setting: a rural Maine Shaker community in the late 1790s. Will Rees visits the Zion community in search of his runaway son, and is asked by the Elders of the community to stay on to investigate a murder there. For more, see my blog post: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201...


message 55: by Peggy (last edited Jul 18, 2012 10:12AM) (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) I've finished Book #24. The Seven Wonders (Roma Sub Rosa, #0) by Steven Saylor If you're a fan of Steven Saylor's Roman detective, Gordianus the Finder, this novel fills in his back story as he embarks on a youthful Grand Tour of the Seven Wonders with his tutor/companion Antipater of Sidon, the renowned poet. But Antipater wishes to travel incognito and fakes his own death. Gordianus finds a mystery to solve at each site they visit, but almost misses the one right under his nose. An entertaining read. See my blog post: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201...


message 56: by Peggy (last edited Jul 20, 2012 12:19PM) (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Book #25. The Orphanmaster This is Jean Zimmerman's first novel, but a couple of years ago I read her fascinating "The Women of the House: How a Colonial She-Merchant Built a Mansion, a Fortune, and a Dynasty". She's used her research on Dutch colonial New Netherlands to write this mystery. Orphans are going missing in New Amsterdam in 1663, but no one seems to care much except for newly-arrived Englishman Edward Drummond who has his own secrets, and she-merchant Blandine van Couvering, who is asked by the African community to investigate the disappearances of some of their children. Far too many suspects, and one of them is the Indian flesh-eating demon of legend, the witika... Warning! Not for the squeamish! For more, see my blog post: http://www.my-book-diary.blogspot.com... The Orphanmaster by Jean Zimmerman


message 57: by Angela (last edited Jul 31, 2012 03:35AM) (new)

Angela (angela_w) I'm reading Ragtime by E.L. Doctorow. 1/1


message 58: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Book #26 Shadow of Night (All Souls Trilogy, #2) by Deborah Harkness I've been waiting to read this book for a year. It's the sequel to "A Discovery of Witches" which you should consider required reading before tackling "Shadow of Night". This one takes Diana Bishop & Matthew Clairmont back in time to find a rare manuscript in Elizabeth I's London. Almost all the action takes place in 1590 - 1591 around Europe. For more, see my blog post: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201...


message 59: by Angela (new)

Angela (angela_w) I've just gotten started on the challenge so I'm way behind. But right now I'm reading Ragtime by E.L. Doctorow and A Walk Through Fire by William Cobb


message 60: by Bethany (last edited Aug 06, 2012 02:10PM) (new)

Bethany (anaticula) Haven't posted in a while, but I read The Swiss Family Robinsonand Catch-22 as books 7 and 8. Now I'm reading The Epic of Gilgameshas number 9 of 12.


message 61: by Peggy (last edited Aug 08, 2012 12:50PM) (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Book #27 by one of my favorite authors: Lindsey Davis: Master and God by Lindsey Davis This stand alone novel covers the reign of the Emperor Domitian, told through the story of a most unlikely couple: Flavia Lucilla, an imperial freedwoman and successful court hairdresser, and Gaius Vinius Clodianus, former legionnaire & vigile, now reluctant Praetorian Guard. How these two first meet and then are later linked together through a lease on a shared Roman apartment is told against a backdrop of court intrigue and paranoia, yet with Davis' wit and humor to bring first century Rome alive. Will these two ever get together? For more, see my blog post: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201...


message 62: by Peggy (last edited Aug 11, 2012 12:20PM) (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Book #28 The Proposal by Mary Balogh . I've enjoyed Ms. Balogh's previous Regency romances, but I found this one overlong and the dialogue stiff(!) and preposterous in places, especially in the steamy sex scenes. Not to my taste. The main characters didn't like each other, and I didn't either. Oh, well... See my blog if you want to read more about it: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201...


message 63: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Book #29 The Winter Queen (Astraea, #1) by Jane Stevenson The first novel in a trilogy that begins (sort of) with Elizabeth Stuart, Queen of Bohemia, and her improbable romance with a former African prince and slave which ends in a clandestine marriage and a child. I won't be reading the rest of the trilogy, if that tells you anything. For more, see my blog posting: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201...


message 64: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Book #30 The Queen's Lover by Francine du Plessix Gray This is Count Axel von Fersen's story told as a memoir with his sister Sophie filling in the missing parts. It starts like a tabloid telling of life on the Grand Tour and the French Court, but as soon as Axel is in a relationship with the French Royal family, the narrative seems to lose its steam. It tells the facts of what happened on that doomed attempt to escape France that he masterminds and recounts the politics that lead up to Marie Antoinette's execution. Once he hears that news, it's off to his mistress and life in the Swedish Court until he himself dies at the hands of a mob. I didn't feel any emotional connections here. For more, see my blog: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201...


message 65: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Book #31 Bring Up the Bodies (Wolf Hall, #2) by Hilary Mantel The second book in Hilary Mantel's trilogy about Henry VIII's fix-it man Thomas Cromwell. Told from Cromwell's perspective, she's made him into a real person for readers, not a cardboard villain. Even better than Wolf Hall! For more, see my blog: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201... Wolf Hall (Wolf Hall, #1) by Hilary Mantel


message 66: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Book #32 The Templar Magician (Templars, #2) by Paul Doherty P.C. Doherty writes a mean historical mystery, whether it's one of his medieval series, or ancient Egyptian. The Templar Magician is a stand alone mystery set in the Holy Land during the Crusades, when a Templar who may be a warlock or socerer is rumored to be responsible for the assasination of Count Raymond. The truth must be followed to an England in the middle of a brutal Civil War between Mathilda and King Stephen. Lots of red herrings, and meticulous research. See my blog for more: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201...


message 67: by Peggy (last edited Sep 26, 2012 12:06PM) (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Bok #33 is the first book in a series set during the Napoleonic Wars: His Majesty's Dragon (Temeraire, #1) by Naomi Novik . Will Laurence, captain of the HMS Reliant, captures a French naval vessel and discovers that it carries a dragon's egg as cargo, an extremely valuable prize of war. Before Captain Laurence can get it safely back to England and turn it over to the Aviator Corps, the egg hatches and Termeraire bonds with him. For the good of the country, Laurence does his duty and joins the Aviator Corps himself, a big step down careerwise, and loses his chance to marry, but he gains a powerful and intelligent new friend. A cast of wonderful characters, including the dragons themselves, and a last ditch effort to save England from an invasion by Napoleon and his troops. See more at my blog posting: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201...


message 68: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Book #34. One of John Maddox Roberts' popular SPQR series, SPQR IX The Princess and the Pirates (SPQR, #9) by John Maddox Roberts I like Decius Caecilia Metellus' slightly cranky, opinionated character. His family's influence is ebbing as his wife's uncle Julius Caesar is gaining power. Decius has to get some additional military service under his belt before moving up the next step of his career ladder. Pirate chasing off Cyprus will do the trick. He doesn't count on adding a young Cleopatra and her ships to his fleet, or solving the murder of his host. For more, see my blog posting: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201...


message 69: by Alexander (new)

Alexander Fontana (pwrpen) | 5 comments Of the books I've read:
"Doc" by Mary Doria Russell was outstanding!
"Carter the Great" was very good but perhaps more towards my personal tastes due to a background in theater arts.
"The Defense" was enjoyable from a chess/history perspective.
"The Sisters Brothers" was award winning, quick read, and crude, for those that like it real and earthy this is what the hired gun was more like.

Then there is my own work that is being released on Henry L. Pittock the newspaper tycoon. See http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/PwrPen

Pittock was intensively researched and lists dozens of wonderful non-fiction history books that were read in order to provide the most overall account of Pittock's life.


message 71: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Book #35 "The Jacobites' Apprentice" by David Ebsworth The Jacobites' Apprentice by David Ebsworth This political novel deals with the question of loyalty in a divided Manchester, England leading up to the Rising of '45. Some crude language, but a most intriguing villain! See my blog posting for more: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201...


message 72: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Book #36 is a pre WWII spy thriller: Mission to Paris by Alan Furst Unrolls in your mind like the very best black & white classic movies! See more at my blog posting: http://www.my-book-diary.blogspot.com...


message 73: by Peggy (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) Book #37 is one I've been eagerly awaiting: The Second Empress A Novel of Napoleon's Court by Michelle Moran . Ms. Moran brings to life a lesser known historical character: Napoleon's second wife, Marie-Louise the mother of his only son. Really enjoyed this one! See my blog posting for more: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com/201...


message 74: by Alexander (new)

Alexander Fontana (pwrpen) | 5 comments For 2012, I wrote/read http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/16... Pittock the Voice of Portland.
I have read: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/14... and http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/14... and http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/14... only to better understand the male rancidity of the 1800s. Cussler's http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/41... and http://www.goodreads.com/search?utf8=... were particularly inspiring due to the nautical fiction I wished to add to my own works. From the NW I sort of liked http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/98... while http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/45... added the turn of the century mystic flavor I was looking for. But with out a doubt, http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/89... ruled for dialog!!!
Currently I'm into the http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13...


message 75: by Peggy (last edited Dec 19, 2012 03:20PM) (new)

Peggy (peggychittum) I'm back with books #38, 39, 40 & 41! Not crazy about Someone Knows My Name Someone Knows My Name A Novel by Lawrence Hill but two excellent mysteries: Anne Perry's annual Christmas novella A Christmas Garland A Christmas Garland A Novel by Anne Perry and The Incense Game (did not figure this one out!) The Incense Game (Sano Ichiro #16) by Laura Joh Rowland , and something a little different in which fate can be foretold through the cards The Stockholm Octavo: The Stockholm Octavo by Karen Engelmann . For more about all four of these books, see my book blog: http://my-book-diary.blogspot.com


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