larryhammer: Yotsuba Koiwai running, label: "enjoy everything" (enjoy everything)
[personal profile] larryhammer
A book meme swiped from [personal profile] muccamukk:

General Questions

This week I’m reading: The Grass Crown, Colleen McCullough, a reread by way of reading through the Masters of Rome series, which I previously left off after book 4.
My favorite book of all time is: Always Coming Home, Ursula Le Guin.
My current favorite book (read or re-read in the last 3 months): Persuasion, Jane Austen, which also contends for the previous. (The book I most recently reread, if that’s what this is asking, is Sage Empress, Sherwood Smith.)
The last book I bought was: The October Horse, Colleen McCullough
The first book I bought with my own money: Too long ago, no idea.
The first book I received as a gift: Too long ago, no idea. I cannot remember not having/receiving many books.
The last book I received as a gift was: There were a handful all at once this past holiday season, the one I remember is The River Has Roots, Amal El-Mohtar
The last book I borrowed from the library: The Trouble with Magic, Ruth Chew
The book physically closest to me right now: A Student’s Dictionary of Classical and Medieval Chinese, rev ed., Paul W. Kroll
Do you read bookfic, and if so what is your favorite bookshop fic? I mostly only read bookfic, as I understand the term, but not very many fics set, either by canon or AU, in bookshops. Am I misreading this question?

This or That

[aka the false binaries section, imposition of dichotomies division]
Physical book or e-book: Yes.
Used or new: Yes.
Fiction or non-fiction: Yes.
Read at a coffee shop or at the park: Yes.
Paperback or hardcover: Paperback, says my wrists.
Romance or Crime: Romance.

Yes or No

[aka the other false binaries section, denial of continuums division]
Stream of consciousness? Rarely.
Poetry? Hard yes.
Memoirs? Rarely.
Philosophy? Sometimes.
Thrillers? Hard no.
Chronicles? Sometimes.
Dialogue heavy? This is so orthogonal to my reading choices it’s a meaningless question.

---L.

Subject quote from Escapade, Janet Jackson.

Date: 13 June 2026 11:42 pm (UTC)
sovay: (I Claudius)
From: [personal profile] sovay
The Grass Crown, Colleen McCullough, a reread by way of reading through the Masters of Rome series, which I previously left off after book 4.

I have never read any of her Roman novels. Talk to me about them?

Date: 14 June 2026 02:43 am (UTC)
sovay: (I Claudius)
From: [personal profile] sovay
One place in her adaptation I found especially interesting, the Catiline Affair. She has a long appendix justifying departing from the standard history, arguing that our only primary source, Cicero, had a self-interest in fudging the order of events, to make himself look good, and her proposed chronology does indeed make more sense than his version.

I may be convinced to check that one out because the two fictional treatments of Catiline I have read are very different from one another and I would be interested to see how McCullough's differs from them.

(John Maddox Roberts' The Catiline Conspiracy (1991) and Steven Saylor's Catilina's Riddle (1993). I discovered the latter series in high school and the former in college and tapped out around 2000–2001 on both except for Saylor's A Gladiator Dies Only Once (2005) which I can remember packing up with the rest of my library, but I haven't read a lot of Roman Republican fiction since.)

Date: 13 June 2026 11:50 pm (UTC)
asakiyume: (good time)
From: [personal profile] asakiyume
Dichotomies neatly handled!

June 2026

S M T W T F S
 123456
7 89101112 13
14151617181920
21222324252627
282930    

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated 14 June 2026 03:24 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios