Ancient & Medieval Historical Fiction discussion

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Inquisition
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JUNE 2012 (Group Read 2): Inquisition by Alfredo Colitto


I'll post this message in The Emperor's Spy Group Read Thread also.





(Okay, I'll go away now and stop being annoyingly helpful. Hee hee.)


I read and loved that series...as you know."
I'm still in love with the first book and movie but the interest fell off and I haven't read the last book or watched the last 4 movies.
Somehow it doesn't surprise me that Terri doesn't like Harry Potter. :)

lol. No, it isn't that I don't like HP, it is that I have about as much interest in the HP books as I do in the Very Hungry Caterpillar.
I didn't mind the movies, although I lost interest after the first 3.




Still love them though.
And Terri....that's what I meant....that you wouldn't be interested. Not that you'd read and hated them or anything....

P.S The kind of age group that I think of when I think HP is the same age group, in this day and age, as all those screaming girls outside Justin Beiber concerts. In fact that is my memory of HP books. Little girls on the nightly news outside bookstores waving their wands and screaming at the tv cameras.

I usually prefer to give away books, to friends or to the library, but I'll confess here, girls, that some last-moment-books-before-catching-a-train had the same end.


I..."
Twilight..hmm...whatever happen to that? ;) That is one craze I am glad to see the back end of.

Yes, chums, let's have ourselves a Twilight bonfire. I'll bring the mead and whole suckling roasting pig, someone else needs to bring the Medieval Band.



For alot of others it seems........and I'm all for any book that gets people reading but sometimes I despair of what's popular. :)


Island Band may suffice, Dawn. Not quite the ambiance we're going for, but we may have to make do. :-)

Not quite what we started planning but it may still work. :D At least we can still get the pig.......


Good thing the group read is gonna start soon, we need to get back on subject here...

I got the book from the library yesterday. Thought it was going to be a BIG book. But it is fairly normal size.
I didn't flick through and read any snippets as the start date is so close I thought I'd wait. I usually like to flick through a bit, to see what the writing is like, is it quality, is it not, just to prepare myself.

Although, there are no date police. Members can start now if you wish. Lol

The paperback was seperate to the ebook and had a book description in Italian.
Using my GR librarian powers ;) I have merged the ebook with the paperbacks, so you can select your edition from all the editions now, and I have changed the Italian description on the English edition of the Inquistion paperback from Italian to English.
If you hadn't noticed the ebook/paperback discrepancy then don't try and understand what I am saying. Just know it is fixed. :-)


:D
Hey at least you can. I'm still a one language person, much to my embarrassment when I go traveling and expect everyone else to speak english.

The p..."
I'm glad you did, I kept thinking I should look into it and see if I should fix it. Now it's done......

:D
Hey at least you can. I'm still a one..."
I know how you feel, Dawn. I will always regret that I did not pursue language study more diligently. I got to a point in French in high school where I could carry on a halfway decent conversation with my teacher, a wonderful German lady, but the next year we had a new one and she was terrible. Unfortunately for me.
It is a shame that Rosetta Stone was not around back in the 50's and 60's.



I guess you will get a kick out of this fact, I am translating a German book with the help of Bing Translator. it is only for my own reading, but it is a lot of work. 444 pages and a highly educated author making it very hard, but rewarding too. No, the book has never been translated to English.
I read French fairly well, speak it moderately. I took a year of Spanish in elementary school. Interestingly enough, I was at an antique fair and saw a photograph of a gentleman in uniform with Spanish text under it. The seller didn't know anything about the photo.
I looked at it and, using my French, was able to do a rough translation: who the man was, what he had done, what social rank he had held, and where his home was.
Interesting... I guess we have the Romans to thank.
I looked at it and, using my French, was able to do a rough translation: who the man was, what he had done, what social rank he had held, and where his home was.
Interesting... I guess we have the Romans to thank.

I have the "advantage" of a mother tongue that no one takes the pain to learn - so it's a logical choice to learn a couple of languages, for business and traveling.
In my line of work I see many French customers, so I learned that one when I started to work. Years ago I spoke French quite well, but languages get lost easily if you don't use them.
Recently, Linda suggested me the books of Andrea Japp and I'm sweating on them. It's pretty good historical fiction, but the language of this author is quite sophisticated - I mean difficult, I guess.
This evening I'll start "Cuore di Ferro", the library provided me the Italian copy so I'll take a break from Middle Age French.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Count of Monte Cristo (other topics)Dissolution (other topics)
The Merica Portal (other topics)
The Merica Portal (other topics)
Dissolution (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
C.J. Sansom (other topics)Andrea H. Japp (other topics)
Alfredo Colitto (other topics)
Nice find, Marty.
A friend of mine found two cheap copies...through Amazon i think??.....she got one sent last week and she said it smelled so bad she wouldn't touch it to read it. Got a refund from the supplier, threw the stinky book in the bin and ordered the other used copy. :-) So although the first book fell through, she is soldiering on with another used purchase and hoping to get it in time to read it with us.