Recent Reads
Dec. 10th, 2005 11:16 amSince finishing The Last Chronicle of Barset, I've moved rather quickly through three books: Steven Brust's Sethra Lavode, Georgette Heyer's The Spanish Bride, and Bernard Cornwell's Sharpe's Tiger.
Sethra Lavode was good, as Brust usually is; I enjoy his Paarfi persona quite a bit. There were no major surprises, given the situation in the Vlad Taltos series (which, after all, is set later in the timeline). I don't really have much to say about it.
The Spanish Bride was... well, unexceptionable, barring the occasionally muddled Spanish (which, I assume, wasn't Heyer's fault). Heyer's romances are without peer, but as a historical novelist she's up against heavyweights like O'Brian and Dunnett, and she really isn't in their league. She doesn't manage to inject the humor and drama (and the kitchen sink) the way O'Brian does, and her characterizations don't have the depth of Dunnett... If I ever read the book again, I'll probably do it with an atlas handy, so I can follow the campaigns in Spain and southern France. Or maybe I'll just read a good history of the Napoleonic era. (Any suggestions?)
Enough people on the LMB list have recommended the Sharpe novels that I finally decided to start them. I picked Sharpe's Tiger on the basis of internal chronology; I assume that publication order is different from internal order. Any recommendations on which to follow? The book itself was fairly interesting. Indian history isn't my forte; I've read The Oxford History of India, but it was rather dry and much of it didn't stick. I do have a general impression of mid-to-late 18th century India: the Sultanate of Delhi in decay, various opportunistic kingdoms - of which I presume Mysore was one - gnawing at its carcass, and the British and French encroaching from the south. Can anyone recommend another history?
Sethra Lavode was good, as Brust usually is; I enjoy his Paarfi persona quite a bit. There were no major surprises, given the situation in the Vlad Taltos series (which, after all, is set later in the timeline). I don't really have much to say about it.
The Spanish Bride was... well, unexceptionable, barring the occasionally muddled Spanish (which, I assume, wasn't Heyer's fault). Heyer's romances are without peer, but as a historical novelist she's up against heavyweights like O'Brian and Dunnett, and she really isn't in their league. She doesn't manage to inject the humor and drama (and the kitchen sink) the way O'Brian does, and her characterizations don't have the depth of Dunnett... If I ever read the book again, I'll probably do it with an atlas handy, so I can follow the campaigns in Spain and southern France. Or maybe I'll just read a good history of the Napoleonic era. (Any suggestions?)
Enough people on the LMB list have recommended the Sharpe novels that I finally decided to start them. I picked Sharpe's Tiger on the basis of internal chronology; I assume that publication order is different from internal order. Any recommendations on which to follow? The book itself was fairly interesting. Indian history isn't my forte; I've read The Oxford History of India, but it was rather dry and much of it didn't stick. I do have a general impression of mid-to-late 18th century India: the Sultanate of Delhi in decay, various opportunistic kingdoms - of which I presume Mysore was one - gnawing at its carcass, and the British and French encroaching from the south. Can anyone recommend another history?
no subject
Date: 2005-12-10 06:20 pm (UTC)Cornwell is excellent, though. I'll also recommend a series he did following an English archer in the 100 Years' War, starting with The Archer's Tale and Vagabond.
For both series, I recommend reading with an atlas as well.
no subject
Date: 2005-12-11 10:54 am (UTC)My reading for the 100 Years War is the Arthur Conan Doyle books "The White Company" and the inferior but still good prequel "Sir Nigel".
I found Rifleman Dodd interesting, but not as entertaining as his naval fiction, of which my absolute favorite is the WWII story "The Ship", about a light crusier in the Med. It's very clearly meant to be a cheering story for the home front and has all the jolly tars from all over the Empire working together harmoniously, but is still a good story. I really like the age of Naval Gunnery, and that was about the peak of it.