Ancient & Medieval Historical Fiction discussion
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LOL...It's not yet 4:30 the afternoon of New Year's Eve..."
4.30 in the arvo? Well then, you should be starting on snacks, dips and first drinks. :)

Happy NYE to you too, happy. See you in 2013 when you get here.

LOL...It's not yet 4:30 the afternoon of New Year's Eve..."
4.30 in the arvo? Well then, you should be starting on snacks, dips and first drinks. :)"
:) Yes, right on schedule!


Happy New Year everyone!

Happy New Year everyone!"
Lucky NY had your families extensive brain power on hand or the ball would never have dropped and NY would be in disarray. Well done Tasha and kids. :D
My fellow Mod Dawn was there in person watching it!! I didn't watch the NY NYE celebrations on tele..so I didn't see her. :)



Also, most people in my friends list were joining the challenge again. Quantify that across the site which has over 10 million members...That would have created extra load in the site for sure.


I have not read it for a while. But whenever I think of the 'scenes' with Dawn and I it still makes me smile. It made me laugh so hard!

I guess you could choose this one for next month group reading...(I didn't dare to click to see the cover).

IRONICALLY, I am in the cloud on this gadget. I was born in a cloud and have never been out of it. I am a dreamer, and dreamers are in the clouds. Could it be that I knew ASUS before it knew me. You may lol now.


I will be serious now. The ASUS tablet does everything that my pc will do. I can hook up the printer and print stuff. I want to use it but am wary because it is fast, books that I had downloaded on Kindle are already on this ASUS. I believe that would be because it operates on a cloud--adding info, killing viruses, etc., automatically. I will figure it out. Trying to add a little levity in this first week of the new year. Thanks for your interest.


You will be perfectly okay with it, Linda. You had to start from scratch with your eReaders and now, so too must you learn the tablet from scratch.
:-)




Answer me this....
We have a couple members tackling their new iPads. How do you copy and paste on the iPad?

after i posted today i messed around trying to do it.



She did write several books about kings, though. I've already mentioned King Phillip II of Spain. I know she wrote at least one of King Henry IV of France. But I don't understand why it's important to show she wrote from a male perspective if this group is open to both.


It seemed to me 'neither fish nor fowl' because it was not a bodice-ripper (which I also like and had expected from the cover), yet it did not really explore the historical context either.
Just my two cents worth.


Sorry, I went to bed last night and am only coming to the conversation now.
The thing is, nobody said Jean Plaidy was kosher. If Jean Plaidy has written a unisex book that is focused on historical content and not focused on emotional elements then people are welcome to include the book in our threads.
We have plenty of authors such as Sharon Kay Penman and Gillian Bradshaw mentioned in the threads. There are as many books on Queens and books by female authors mentioned and recommended in this group as we do male authored books and characters.
As yet I don't think we have even had more than two group reads that were even on a King.
We have books in the polls that have a female main characters, and we have books in the group reads that were written by women.
I cannot make people vote them in as the monthly group read, but some have been. So I don't know where all this is coming from.
I even have a couple female character novels up my sleeve for future Polls.
I respect that you love your Plaidy. Nobody here would ever look down on her, or you for reading them.
It is just that there is no group on GR that focuses on the books we focus on. Unisex (books that both men and women read...and they do or they wouldn't be talking about them and voting them in during Group Reads) and high adventure. I do realise that some of those books that have men on their covers (high adventure) are marketed at men. But in this group they are read by both sexes.
We are a nice group of people who enjoy each others company and enjoy talking books and history.
Fair, considered and respectful discussion (not discussion that makes out as if the group is sexist which is mind blowing to me.. because I am very much a woman and my fellow Moderator dawn is very much a woman, and half our active members are women) is always welcome. :)

I have always found her research to be excellent and the small details of everyday life fascinating. She did lean heavily on Agnes Strickland's "Lives of the Queens of England", but that was probably the major reference source at the time she was writing.
Her Queens of England series were probably the high point of her writing career. Each volume was written as though it was the autobiography of the said Queen. I thought the ones on Mary I and Catherine of Braganza were the best of them.

The group rules include this one, which was set up during the formation of the group by the Group Founder Ireney.
Absolutely no romantic historical fiction of melodramatic, tear-inducing kinds.
Don't blame me. I did not make the rules, but as the moderator, I have to enforce them. People should read the rules when they join and then there might be more tolerance and understanding of what we are doing in here, because we are very up front and it should not be held against us that we are not something else.

I have always found her research ..."
My Mum used to try and make me read her in highschool. :)
But I was more interested in Julie Campbell's Trixie Belden books. I was always into the high adventure. lol.

I have always fo..."
I read both! :D I think the day I discovered Historical Mysteries was the best day of my life. LOL. Combined two of my favorite areas of reading.


I have had some hits and misses in historical mystery. I am glad to have found The King's Spy (the group read) and the C.J. Sansom series.
And I will be trying the Sister Fidelma series this year starting with Absolution by Murder and also the Ellis Peters Brother Cadfael series.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Berry Pickers (other topics)Fortune's Child (other topics)
Hild (other topics)
Sharpe's Command (other topics)
Edenglassie (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Amanda Peters (other topics)Nicola Griffith (other topics)
Bernard Cornwell (other topics)
Bernard Cornwell (other topics)
Allan Hands (other topics)
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Yeah. What's taking you so long? :-)"
LOL...It's not yet 4:30 the afternoon of New Year's Eve here in the Pacific Northwest USA! We've got a ways to go, but don't wait for us, we'll get there eventually!