winterbadger: (books2)
I've finished reading some more Holmes.

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle (34)
The Hound of the Baskervilles by Arthur Conan Doyle (35)

The Hound I had read before (there was a version, with illustrations and annotation, that I seem to remember from school libraries that was, I think, my first introduction to SH), and it's cool. It was even more fun having seen the recent BBC remake with Bernard Cummberbund; I enjoy how the writers and producers of that remade series take some of the basic elements and create a whole new story with, essentially, the same characters.

I had thought that none of the short stories were new to me (we had all the books when I was a teenager, either at home or in one of the four libraries that we regularly plundered), but I'm almost positive that a couple of the tales in Adventures were totally new to me. Curious.

Afghanistan: A Military History from Alexander the Great to the War Against the Taliban by Stephen Tanner
The Interpreter by Robert Moss
Boer Commando by Denneys Reitz
In the Skies of Nomonhan by Dimitar Nedialkov
The Fort by Bernard Cornwell
Through a Howling Wilderness: Benedict Arnold's March to Quebec, 1775 by Thomas Desjardins
The Western Front: Ordinary Soldiers and the Defining Battles of World War I by Richard Holmes
Knights of the Cross; or, Krzyzacy by Henryk Sienkiewicz
Tales of Terror and Mystery by Arthur Conan Doyle
The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling
Just So Stories by Rudyard Kipling
winterbadger: (books2)
Little America by Rajiv Chandrasekaran (32)
(review/synopsis under the cut) )

Dolly and the Bird of Paradise by Dorothy Dunnett (33): Another Johnson Johnson mystery. Another unsuspecting (but capable) young woman encounters JJ, the yachting, portrait-painting intelligence officer and becomes involved in one of his cases. High life, sailing misadventures, murders, and an unexpected (almost unprecedented) glimpse into Johnson's personal life ensure. Of all JJ's appearances, it is here, I think, that he reminds me the most of Francis Crawford. Like all these novels, it comes with a recommendation; just remember that while her detective novels are not as ornately complex and footnoted as Dunnett's historical novels, they're not brain candy--there's plot within plot, and few things are straightforward or, indeed, ever clearly spelled out. Read this when you're awake and clear-headed to get the most out of it.

In progress:
Afghanistan: A Military History from Alexander the Great to the War Against the Taliban by Stephen Tanner
The Interpreter by Robert Moss
Boer Commando by Denneys Reitz
In the Skies of Nomonhan by Dimitar Nedialkov
The Fort by Bernard Cornwell
Through a Howling Wilderness: Benedict Arnold's March to Quebec, 1775 by Thomas Desjardins
The Western Front: Ordinary Soldiers and the Defining Battles of World War I by Richard Holmes
Knights of the Cross; or, Krzyzacy by Henryk Sienkiewicz
Tales of Terror and Mystery by Arthur Conan Doyle
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle
winterbadger: (sailing)
Currently reading Dolly and the Bird of Paradise. Very grateful that if I have to ride out a hurricane, I'm doing it in a house well inland with plenty of candles and books and three very cuddly cats, not in a ketch with no sails, no petrol, no radio, no navigation equipment, no charts, in the middle of the night, somewhere far from land, with several injured people to take care of.
winterbadger: (books)
Washington's Crossing by David Hackett Fisher (21) This is a remarkably good book. I loved almost all of it and was very sorry when I was done with it. I borrowed it on CD from the library, but I will be sure to buy a copy. It gave me all sorts of ideas for wargames, for short fiction, and for work that might be interesting to do in real history. It takes the reader from the beginning of the Revolution through the aftermath of the American winter campaign in the Jerseys of 1776/1777. It includes excellent character studies of Washington and a number of his officers and some of the same (though not as comprehensive) for the British high command. Between this and other books, my appreciation for Washington, Knox, Greene, the Howe brothers, and Cornwallis (some of them already high) have grown, while my opinions of Charles Lee and Henry Clinton have plummeted. Some of the most interesting part of the book is the very detailed treatment of the British occupation of the Jerseys in the summer and autumn of 1776 and the winter campaign that followed. My only criticisms of the book are (1) that Fisher seems to challenge all of the casualty reports from the British while seeming to unquestioningly accept all those by the rebels and (2) that Fisher goes much too far, in my opinion, in trying to find relevance in current events for his work. History is worth researching and writing for any number of reasons, most of all simply for the sake of better understanding the past. A slavish insistence on being able to draw direct and immediate lessons for today from events 230+ years ago detracts from, rather than enhances, the value of a history book, IMNSHO.

Honeymoon in Tehran by Azadeh Moaveni (22) I've not yet read the same author's Lipstick Jihad, but this book makes me want to. This is an account of several years' life in Tehran, written by an Iranian-American journalist who met and married a German-Iranian man, started a family, and tried as best they could to build a life in Iran. Despite loving their country and their culture and having deep family roots there, they eventually found life under the Islamic Republic too arbitrary and stifling and left to live abroad. It gives a great perspective on life in modern Iran. I do have a few doubts as to the definitiveness of the author's take on Iranian public opinion and satisfaction with the regime; she comes from a very western-oriented, upper-middle class to upper class family from Tehran, and her time in the country outside the capitol seems to have been quite limited, as does her day to day insight into the lives of less western, less well off families. Nonetheless, she did travel widely and talked to a lot of people, and she is a useful corrective to what I see as some grievous misperceptions about Iran and its people in the west. Many Iranians detest Ahmadinejad and dislike the strictures imposed by his government and the religious authorities, but pressure from abroad will simply cause most Iranians the rally around the government they dislike.

The Master of All Desires by Judith Merkle Riley (23) I'd read this several years ago, but reclaimed it when we were going through my mum's remaining effects in storage. It's great fun in and of itself, and I also like it because it involves the same French court figures as Dorothy Dunnett's Francis Crawford books, overlapping the end of her series and mentioning a couple of important events that her characters also experience (the disastrous battle of St Quentin, England's final loss of Calais to the French). As she always does, Riley creates wonderful, engaging characters (even the baddies are appealing) and deals (as far as I know) with great respect for history, not mashing it around just to make her plot how she likes it (though, of course, when your characters speak to angels and demons, there's always a little bit of leeway from history that has to be accounted for. :-) I'm always torn between wanting to study 18th and early 19th century American and European history and wanting to study Early Modern (16th and 17th century) Europe. If I eventually go the latter route, it will in part be the fault of Dunnett and Riley.

In progress:
The Phantom Major by Virginia Cowles
Dolly and the Bird of Paradise by Dorothy Dunnett
Drinking Arak Off an Ayatollah's Beard: A Journey Through the Inside-Out Worlds of Iran and Afghanistan by Nicholas Jubber
The Fort by Bernard Cornwell
Through a Howling Wilderness: Benedict Arnold's March to Quebec, 1775 by Thomas Desjardins
The Western Front: Ordinary Soldiers and the Defining Battles of World War I by Richard Holmes
Knights of the Cross; or, Krzyzacy by Henryk Sienkiewicz
Tales of Terror and Mystery by Arthur Conan Doyle

I trimmed off a number of others that I've started but haven't actually been reading recently. If they get revived, they go back on the list.
winterbadger: (books)
Playing catch-up with recording them. Comments later.

Catalina's Riddle by Stephen Saylor (17)
The Serial Garden by Joan Aiken (18)
A History of the Middle East by Peter Mansfield (19)
Dolly and the Doctor Bird by Dorothy Dunnett (20)

In progress:
Washington's Crossing by David Hackett Fisher
Drinking Arak Off an Ayatollah's Beard: A Journey Through the Inside-Out Worlds of Iran and Afghanistan by Nicholas Jubber
The Fort by Bernard Cornwell
In the Name of the Father: Washington's Legacy, Slavery, and the Making of a Nation by Francois Furstenberg
Doom Castle by Neil Munro
Hostile Skies: A Combat History of the American Air Service in World War I by James J. Hudson
My Name Is Red by Orhan Pamuk
Through a Howling Wilderness: Benedict Arnold's March to Quebec, 1775 by Thomas Desjardins
Foch: Supreme Allied Commander in the Great War by Michael S. Neiberg
The Western Front: Ordinary Soldiers and the Defining Battles of World War I by Richard Holmes
Laxdaela Saga
Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha
by Roddy Doyle
Shards of Empire by Susan Schwartz
In the Skies of Nomonhan: Japan versus Russia, May - September 1939 by Dimitar Nedialkov
The Lily Hand And Other Stories by Edith Pargeter
Understanding China by John Bryan Starr
The Williamite Wars in Ireland, 1688-1691 by John Childs
Theoretical Criminology by George B. Vold et al.
Knights of the Cross; or, Krzyzacy by Henryk Sienkiewicz
Tales of Terror and Mystery by Arthur Conan Doyle

ETA: My sister in law asked about Krzyzacy: I replied

Ah. Do you know Sienkiewicz? He was a great writer of the romances (in the broad sense). Imagine a writer with the prose style, sweep and complexity, and characterization of Dickens, but instead of writing about the complexities of early modern society telling huge, exciting adventure stories. You know, just call him the Walter Scott of Poland, and you'll get the idea. :-) His stories are full of bold and dashing heroes, stalwart comrades, beautiful but chaste damsels (some of whom are accomplished with a sabre and pistol themselves), scheming villains (some handsome but wicked, some repulsive and degraded) and hordes and hordes of extras. And, of course, the true centerpiece of his stories--the forests and rivers and grasslands and mountains of Poland itself.

They don't have a ton of SUBTLETY, but they're great fun (if you can take the writing, which is sometimes a bit longwinded by modern standards) and they're almost all of them quite page-y, so you never feel as if you had only gotten started and here it is ending. Probably his most famous work is his Great Trilogy: With Fire and Sword, The Deluge, and Fire in the Steppe, which are about a great war in 17th century Poland and Ukraine. (Most famous at least in Poland--in the west, his most famous book is probably Quo Vadis, a novel about the early Christians in Rome, which has been made into several movies.)

He wrote a fair bit of contemporary fiction as well, but it never got the attention his historical novels did. In 1905, he received the Nobel Prize for literature, as a sort of lifetime achievement award.

Of course, I like his stories because the dashing heroes are generally named Jan! :-)
winterbadger: (books)
Goodness, it's been too long! Time for a
Book update! )
winterbadger: (books)
Practicing History by Barbara Tuchman (11). Tuchman's approach to writing history, this set of collected essays on the process and practice of writing history reminds me, is very close to my own. History doesn't have to have some greater goal; it is an important enough task to examine, remember, and retell the events of the past without justifying it through some notion of predicting the future. One hopes that, by looking hard enough at the past, we will manage not to make exactly the same mistakes we have made (just new and different ones), but history should not be looked up on as some sort of Hari Selden-like psycho-science that will allow us to foretell what is to come in painstaking and unquestionable detail. History does need to be readable, however; it needs to eschew jargon and purposeful obfuscation for the sake of self-aggrandisement. It needs to be based in fact as much as possible. It needs to make its own limitations clear. And, I would agree with Tuchman, the best history is written as much as possible from primary sources; secondary sources are excellent for providing background, but overreliance on them can tilt the historian's viewpoint too much, so that he or she ends up writing someone else's view of the story, not their own. I don't share Tuchman's skepticism and ridicule (suggesting an underlying fear and incomprehension) of the role of computers and quantitative analysis as historical tools, but I would agree their overuse can become stultifying and end up becoming simply data collection, without the necessary analysis and synthesis that is the point of doing the research in the first place.

Tuchman shows, in her adulatory and starry-eyed essay on Israel that her choice to stop Bible and Sword at the beginning of the First World War and not cover the Mandate and the War of Independence was a wise one. She is utterly unable to be objective about anything involving Israel. I would also wish that she had not filled the latter portion of the book with her political essays about Vietnam; I would far rather have read more of her writing about history itself. But I did enjoy her commencement address to a Williams graduating class about a decade before my time, arguing that the response of academic America to the military as a result of its dislike of the war was exactly the wrong way to deal with the issues, morally questionable and totally ineffective.

The War to End All Wars: The American Military Experience in World War I by Edward M. Coffman (12). Not a new book (published 1968), but new to me, and I enjoyed it a great deal. It provided all the level of detail I wanted in an overview of the military participation of America in the Great War. Sections deal with the problems of expanding the armed forces, of the organization of the civilian offices, of the reorganization and expansion of the General Staff, of the role of the Navy and the air forces in the war, and then a long portion on the training, development, transport, and employment of the Army in France and the events of each of its major campaigns. There are skillful portraits of several figures (Pershing, of course, but other military men like Hunter Liggett, George Marshall, Billy Mitchell, and Clarence Edwards, and civilians like Newton D. Baker and Josephus Daniels).

In Progress:

Doom Castle by Neil Munro
Hostile Skies: A Combat History of the American Air Service in World War I by James J. Hudson
Drinking Arak Off an Ayatollah's Beard: A Journey Through the Inside-Out Worlds of Iran and Afghanistan by Nicholas Jubber
My Name Is Red by Orhan Pamuk
Through a Howling Wilderness: Benedict Arnold's March to Quebec, 1775 by Thomas Desjardins
Foch: Supreme Allied Commander in the Great War by Michael S. Neiberg
The Western Front: Ordinary Soldiers and the Defining Battles of World War I by Richard Holmes
Laxdaela Saga
Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha
by Roddy Doyle
Shards of Empire by Susan Schwartz
In the Skies of Nomonhan: Japan versus Russia, May - September 1939 by Dimitar Nedialkov
The Lily Hand And Other Stories by Edith Pargeter
Understanding China by John Bryan Starr
The Williamite Wars in Ireland, 1688-1691 by John Childs
Theoretical Criminology by George B. Vold et al.
Knights of the Cross; or, Krzyzacy by Henryk Sienkiewicz
Tales of Terror and Mystery by Arthur Conan Doyle

Removed from the list

A Soldier of the Great War by Mark Helprin: I have tried three or four times to read this book; I am now giving up and putting it in the sell/recycle pile. Helprin can conjure up some beautiful imagery, but his characters are tiresome, unsympathetic, and unbelievable. I found myself wanting to throw the book across the room, it was so cloying--the central character is what you would get if you put Carlos Casteneda, Yoda, and Peter Pan.
winterbadger: (books2)
Not much time to add detail, but I wanted to record the following.

Read more... )
winterbadger: (books)
I have a feeling I may have missed out a book or two that I've read so far, but if they are not memorable enough for me to recall them now... :-)

So far, it has been mostly re-reads:

The King Must Die by Mary Renault (1): I started this sometime last year. I loved Mary Renault's writing when I was a teenager and, unlike other authors, she doesn't disappoint on revisiting. A retelling of the beginning of the story of Theseus, this is one of the first historical novels I recall reading. An excellent book, evocative and filled with mystery.

The Prydain Chronicles by Lloyd Alexander (2): More books (I'll just count them all as one--they're fairly short) that I read as a kid and loved dearly. I still love them--the characters and the landscape, the relationships and the lessons or examples that are there for a reader...they are a great treasure. Though I read most of them in the paperbacks I still have, I also read the last book and the short stories that are collected with the novels into a single volume. The latter come with some charming black and white illustrations.

Stardust by Neil Gaiman (3): Though I love NG and have seen this movie several times, I realised when I started reading the book that I had never read it! It's wonderful--I can see why most of the changes from it were made when it was transferred to film, and I can see why NG was (so it has been reported) quite happy with the differences. The movie adds some excellent characters and scenes; the book has more that were not used in filming. The ending is different but still wonderful. I can now love both versions of the tale equally, for different reasons.

Anansi Boys by Neil Gaiman (4): Again, I think I read this before, as I remember some elements of the story. But there were other bits that I didn't remember. Either way, it's a lovely book, with NG's excellent ability to draw very complex and fully realised characters fairly simply and naturally, and his talent for taking other, older tales and retelling them with some additions of his own, coming out with quite new and appealing stories that are funny, and sweet, and scary, and hugely entertaining.

I don't think I counted a recorded lecture I worked through in the autumn/winter about Byzantium. It was interesting, and so is one I've been listening to about Islam and the West, but I don't think I will do more of these any time soon. I prefer the more measured, finished nature of books for listening, rather then the sort of scattershot, impromptu nature of off-the-cuff lectures.

In progress: (and, yes, this is a ridiculously long list)
Stilwell and the American Experience in China by Barbara Tuchman
Doom Castle by Neil Munro
Hostile Skies: A Combat History of the American Air Service in World War I by James J. Hudson
Seasons on Harris: A Year in Scotland's Outer Hebrides by David Yeadon
Drinking Arak Off an Ayatollah's Beard: A Journey Through the Inside-Out Worlds of Iran and Afghanistan by Nicholas Jubber
My Name Is Red by Orhan Pamuk
Through a Howling Wilderness: Benedict Arnold's March to Quebec, 1775 by Thomas Desjardins
Lady Windermere's Fan by Oscar Wilde
Foch: Supreme Allied Commander in the Great War by Michael S. Neiberg
The Western Front: Ordinary Soldiers and the Defining Battles of World War I by Richard Holmes
Laxdaela Saga
Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha
by Roddy Doyle
Shards of Empire by Susan Schwartz
In the Skies of Nomonhan: Japan versus Russia, May - September 1939 by Dimitar Nedialkov
A Soldier of the Great War by Mark Helprin
The Lily Hand And Other Stories by Edith Pargeter

Indefinitely suspended
Understanding China by John Bryan Starr
The Williamite Wars in Ireland, 1688-1691 by John Childs
Theoretical Criminology by George B. Vold et al.
Knights of the Cross; or, Krzyzacy by Henryk Sienkiewicz

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