What Book Are You Reading XV - The Pile Keeps Growing!

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Yesterday I finished reading:

Empress Dowager Cixi

by

Jung Chang

copyright 2013

It is a biographey painting a very positive picture
of a historically very important person, and an
informative history of China between 1852 and 1908.

I'd recommend it.
 
Yesterday I finished reading:

Empress Dowager Cixi

by

Jung Chang

copyright 2013

It is a biographey painting a very positive picture
of a historically very important person, and an
informative history of China between 1852 and 1908.

I'd recommend it.

I've only read Wild Swans by her.
 
I bought it at the south city dump's recycling shop for only 10 pence (or maybe 50) pence.

There is criticism that her portrayal of Empress Dowager Cixi is excessively favourable,
but she made some good points that much of the official history reflected her enemies' roles.

I suspect that Wild Swans may suffer from more personal bias.
 
Anyone can help me understand what 'cabinet' here is referring to?

Spoiler :

It was a small cabinet; the walls were covered with pictures, one of which was worth more than the whole lineage of the owner of the palace. Oh, yes! Zanoni was right. The painter IS a magician; the gold he at least wrings from his crucible is no delusion. A Venetian noble might be a fribble, or an assassin,—a scoundrel, or a dolt; worthless, or worse than worthless, yet he might have sat to Titian, and his portrait may be inestimable,—a few inches of painted canvas a thousand times more valuable than a man with his veins and muscles, brain, will, heart, and intellect!
In this cabinet sat a man of about three-and-forty,—dark-eyed, sallow, with short, prominent features, a massive conformation of jaw, and thick, sensual, but resolute lips; this man was the Prince di —. His form, above the middle height, and rather inclined to corpulence, was clad in a loose dressing-robe of rich brocade. On a table before him lay an old-fashioned sword and hat, a mask, dice and dice-box, a portfolio, and an inkstand of silver curiously carved.
“Well, Mascari,” said the prince, looking up towards his parasite, who stood by the embrasure of the deep-set barricadoed window,—“well! the Cardinal sleeps with his fathers. I require comfort for the loss of so excellent a relation; and where a more dulcet voice than Viola Pisani’s?”
 
I would surmise that it's a high-backed wooden chair.
 
Possibly, but it may be a mistranslation for a small room. I suggest translating booth, closet, compartment,
cubby-hole, den, niche, smug etc. into the original language, and then back translate to English.
 
Probably some type of small room, filled with art, books, and exotic objects.
Cabinets of Curiosities said:
Cabinets of curiosities, also known as ‘wonder rooms’, were small collections of extraordinary objects which, like today’s museums, attempted to categorise and tell stories about the wonders and oddities of the natural world. This illustration shows the tiny scenes created by the anatomist Frederick Ruysch (1638 - 1731) which were included in his cabinet of curiosities. Ruysch's museum displayed body parts and preserved organs alongside exotic birds, butterflies and plants. His daughter prepared delicate cuffs or collars to be slipped on to dead arms and necks. Small skeletons were positioned crying into handkerchiefs, wearing strings of pearls, or playing the violin.
 
It has walls, few things tend to have that.
Thought if it's antique, I'd also likely imagine those miniature closet-like objects. Then again, the allusion to the collection itself, and not the space where it is stored (and which has walls inevitably) is also very logical.
 
"Cabinet" has an old use as a small office or space.
 
I just finished The Confederate Reader: How the South Saw the War, a collection of primary source material. A mix of letters, diaries, official reports, news articles, etc. A lot of interest, but especially considering that the past's view of itself is different from ours: for instance, reporters at the time saw Gettysburg as an incomplete victory, not a loss mortally wounding Lee's army.
 
I just finished The Confederate Reader: How the South Saw the War, a collection of primary source material. A mix of letters, diaries, official reports, news articles, etc. A lot of interest, but especially considering that the past's view of itself is different from ours: for instance, reporters at the time saw Gettysburg as an incomplete victory, not a loss mortally wounding Lee's army.
Interesting. It is easy to see Gettysburg that way. Lee invaded the north and threatened cities there much like the Union army had invaded Virginia in previous years. Lee was repulsed but not cleanly defeated. It is only in hindsight that we see that as the high watermark of the confederacy. Historians will do the same with the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
 
Ended The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin.
Liked it.
Spoiler :

The begining of the book is excellent, introduces the world, its magic and the peoples
Then there is about 50% of the book in which the story of three characters is told.
During this part I was unable to undertstad why the only character I could not feel empathy with, was having the longest chapters.
Then, this plot twist shows you that these 3 characters are the same person, in differente periods, and everything makes sense, constructing a really good book


Starting His Majesty's Dragon (Temeraire) by Naomi Novik
 
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The Fifth Season is the first book in a trilogy: I'd recommend the 2 sequels as well.
 
Just finished John Steinbeck's partial adaptation of Mallory's Le Mort d'Arthur, The Tales of King Arthur and his Noble Knights. I had Monty Python lines in my head the same time. This was my first proper dive into the Arthurian myths, so I was in for many surprises. Didn't realize Uther Pendragon was a lech with the self-control of Trump, for instance, who begot Arthur by knocking up one of his vassals' wife.

My favourite adaption of Malory (as opposed to complete rewriting of the story) is T.H. White's The Once And Future King. The musical Camelot and Disney's The Sword in the Stone were both based on it.
Its very dated now and the rewriting of Arthur to be English grates but its much more readable than Malory.
 
Just starting Bable by RF Kuang. London and the British Empire in 1830 with magic! Excellent so far.
 
@Takhisis I think you would enjoy Bable. Much of the story involves translation, etymology and the connections between languages.
 
Ended The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin.
Liked it.
Spoiler :

The begining of the book is excellent, introduces the world, its magic and the peoples
Then there is about 50% of the book in which the story of three characters is told.
During this part I was unable to undertstad why the only character I could not feel empathy with, was having the longest chapters.
Then, this plot twist shows you that these 3 characters are the same person, in differente periods, and everything makes sense, constructing a really good book


Starting His Majesty's Dragon (Temeraire) by Naomi Novik
The Fifth Season is the first book in a trilogy: I'd recommend the 2 sequels as well.
Winners of 3+ Hugo Awards for Best Novel: Robert A. Heinlein (6), Lois McMaster Bujold (4), Isaac Asimov, Fritz Lieber, Vernor Vinge, Connie Willis, and NK Jemisin (3 each).
Winners of consecutive Hugo Awards for Best Novel: Orson Scott Card, Lois McMaster Bujold, and NK Jemisin.
Winners of 3 consecutive Hugo Awards for Best Novel: NK Jemisin.
Winners of Hugo Awards for all 3 books in a trilogy: NK Jemisin.

The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms and The City We Became are pretty good, too.
 
The day before yesterday I finished reading:

The Last Englishman
The Double Life of Arthur Ransome


by

Roland Chambers

copyright 2009

It is a biography of the person who is generally known to the public as
the author of the famous Swallows and Amazons childrens book series.

He saw himself as a serious writer, but he had to make do as a
journalist serving as a go between the Bolsheviks and the west.

The author has taken into account both declassified UK intelligence and
soviet intelligence records to try to flesh out this unique character who
was at the very crux of history meeting Lenin and Trotsky and others.

I found it altogether fascinating.
 
Bable was excellent through and through.

Starting Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky
 
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