Showing posts with label Phillipa Gregory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phillipa Gregory. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

SO behind...part 1

I've been reading a decent amount since before Thanksgiving, and now it's December, and I haven't written anything down.  And I will, but before I forget, sold the following books to the Used Books department at the Harvard Bookstore today - only half of the ones I dragged in, but hey, it's $10 and change in store credit, and a slightly less teetery tower of books (that I'll never read again) on the floor of my apartment.

Quickly:
Fingersmith, Sarah Waters - not exactly my cup of tea, but I have to say, it was well-written.  A little confusing in places, but that is as it should be.  The more I think about it, the more I think I liked it / it was good, but I don't need to own it, either.
The Constant Princess, Philippa Gregory - I think this might be one of my favorites of the Gregory Tudor books; it's certainly not as "exciting" as The Other Boleyn Girl (which I think was the first one of hers I read), but Katherine of Aragon makes for an appealing protagonist, as I recall.
The Last Camel Died at Noon, Elizabeth Peters - I feel like I SHOULD like these books and their protagonist (Amelia Peabody) better than I actually do.  But I find the main characters more annoying than anything...wish Harvard Bookstore had taken the other two I had off my hands as well!
Tyrannosaur Canyon, Douglas Preston - dumb, but funny.  Read it on a plane, I think.
Shutter Island, Dennis Lehane - talked about this book here when I read it, so no need to go back over it here.  Saw the movie with N and Dad a while ago, that was kinda fun.  Totally different from the book, though, as much as I remembered of the book at the time.  And RATS.  UGH.  Had to close my eyes.

Interesting that two of the five here have movie adaptations (and a third if you count references) - I should check out Fingersmith & The Other Boleyn Girl, in its various incarnations

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Fun with History!

This is from my other blog, Better Living Through History, but I was limited what I could label, so there I focused on the non-fiction, here I will focus on the fiction...
So, I have long wanted to construct some sort of course using novels, poetry, films, etc. to "teach" history - or, that is, to introduce a subject in a fun way, and then make scholarly works available to provide context. Here's a first attempt, which is clearly just for my own amusement, and not actually meant for learning. As for "Wicked old-timey Jews" - here I am referring to Jewish diaspora populations (including crypto-Jews) in the Medieval and Early Modern periods, particularly so-called Port Jews and those in the Mediterranean world(because I could be totally wrong, but the Sephardic population during this time seems to be more fun).


For starters, a friend from college, N., gave me The Ghost of Hannah Mendes one year for Christmas (yes, my Jewish friend gave me a Jewish book for Christmas. Yay, melting pot!). I really, really enjoyed it, and have read it more than once. The characters were a little flat, but I loved the way the story goes back and forth between a Renaissance Jewish woman and her modern-day descendants who are trying to trace her story, told in some lost documents, and the parallels drawn between their search for love and goals in life, and the same searches their ancestress and grandmother carried out. The story can be a bit heavy-handed at times, really hitting you over the head with some stuff, but it's fun and romantic, and the author, Naomi Ragen, does a nice job setting up some of the exotic scenes, in modern and Renaissance Spain and Venice, particularly.

Geraldine Brooks also traces the history of a document in People of the Book, which was not as much fun to read (although it was fun!), but is much better written as far as straight skill. I think they're a nice complement. It's kinda a stretch, but the Phillipa Gregory book The Queen's Fool stars a young converso girl (conversa?) in London, who is tied up with Mary and Elizabeth. And there's always the first book in the "Mistress of the Art of Death" series, which is sorta on the subject of Jews in England but I love the book/series/characters, so I'm pluggin' em!





After these, for the real historical context, readers could turn to Jonathan I. Israel's Diasporas Within A Diaspora: Jews, Crypto-Jews, and the World Maritime Empires (1540-1740), Paolo Bernardini and Norman Fiering, eds., The Jews and the Expansion of Europe to the West 1450-1800, David Cesarani, ed., Port Jews: Jewish Communities in Cosmopolitan Trading Centres, 1550-1950, and Cesarani and Gemma Romain, eds., Jews and Port Cities, 1590-1990: Commerce, Community, and Cosmopolitanism. There is also an article by David Sorkin, "The port Jew: Notes toward a social type," in the Journal of Jewish Studies (51:1, 1999).

For more "readable" non-fiction, perhaps Ornament of the World (which, I must be honest, I haven't opened yet, but it sounds great!) by Maria Rosa Menocal, about "how Muslims, Jews, and Christians Created A Culture of Tolerance in Medieval Spain" or the GORGEOUS (lots and lots of pictures) The Arts of Intimacy: Christians, Jews, and Muslims and the Making of Castilian Culture. There are also some books on the similar cultural interactions in Sicily, and I am looking into more on Jewish communities in New World port cities.