RIP Challenge IV

This is my first time joining one of Carl’s challenges at Stainless Steel Droppings and I’m very excited!  I’ve seen a lot of people having a ton of fun with them and I finally decided to forget the fact that I fail at challenges and join in.

The R(eaders) I(mbibing) P(eril) challenge invites us to read scary books between September 1st and October 31st from a variety of genres.  I’m planning on doing Peril the First, which challenges me to read 4 books between now and then.  I suspect the next 24 hour Read-a-Thon towards the end of October will help a lot if I participate.  I’d like to but it’s the weekend after our wedding, so we might be off somewhere instead!

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My pool is gleaned from my TBR pile and extensive perusal of others’ lists, since I’ve never chosen books for this challenge before!

  • Mistress of the Art of Death, Ariana Franklin
  • The Strain, Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan
  • Fragile Eternity, Melissa Marr
  • Vampire Academy, Richelle Mead
  • The Maze Runner, James Dashner
  • The Road, Cormac McCarthy
  • The Angel’s Game, Carlos Ruiz Zafon
  • An Instance of the Fingerpost, Iain Pears

I think that’s a good list to start!  I’ve gone with only books I currently own for now.  I reserve the right to switch it up with an exciting library book, but since I’m changing libraries in a couple of weeks I’m going to wait until I can browse in my new one.  Anyone want to suggest which book I should start with on September 1st?

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BTT: Recent Fluff

btt2What’s the lightest, most “fluff” kind of book you’ve read recently?

While I was in the car on the way to Cornwall, I read What Happens in London by Julia Quinn and I think that has to be my answer. It was such a fun, light, fast read that it enabled me to ignore all the noise involved in traveling and enjoy myself. It even had me laughing a few times, which prompted curious looks from everyone in the car with me.

Speaking of Cornwall, here are a couple shots of the ocean from the very edge, near Land’s End:

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Review: Crossed, Nicole Galland

One day in the year 1202, a British man breaks into the tent of a marquis, believing that he can both kill his enemy and be killed himself, achieving his ultimate goals in this life.  Fortunately, the Briton is unwillingly rescued from suicide by a pious knight, Gregor of Mainz, something of a religious and martial icon at the start of the Fourth Crusade.  Before they set sail, the Briton manages to rescue an Arab princess, who shares space on the journey with Gregor, his brother Otto, Otto’s concubine, and two dimwitted servants.  Together, this peculiar crew embark on one of history’s most disastrous mistakes with thousands of other knights, clerics, and leaders.

It probably isn’t normal for most readers of this book to know all about the catastrophic Fourth Crusade.  Catastrophic in hindsight, that is; this one was remarkably successful in terms of victories but horrid in terms of killing other Christians and not even coming close to achieving its goal of retaking Jerusalem.  For the record, all the crusades were wrong and are actually appalling to think about, but this one is even so in medieval terms, which is quite impressive.  So on approaching Crossed, I generally had down the politics, the outline of events, and the crazy people who were at the head of this insanity.  If I hadn’t, I think the politics would have irritated me, but the history is great.  No one can make this stuff up.  It’s just too unreal for words, but it happened, and at a comfortable 800 year distance, we can even find it horrific in an amusing way.

Such is what Galland accomplishes with Crossed. She doesn’t really go for a medieval mindset with these characters.  The closest is probably Gregor, who adheres to medieval standards very rigidly, but the rest of the characters are often used to play with the absurdities of medieval life rather than being approximations of the people who might have lived 800 years ago.  I got used to this idea in Galland’s first book and it hasn’t really bothered me since now that I know what she’s doing.  The Briton is mainly the character that she uses for this purpose, employing hindsight to fuel his clever retorts and lamentations on fate, such as in response to the glory of battle,

“Is Christ smiling down at you for this?  Do you become more Christian if you smear yourself in Christian gore?” (302)

At all times, we’re fully aware that this crusade is horrible and what the knights are being told to do is completely wrong.  It’s terrible, but it’s also showing us the absurdity of the entire idea by poking at its ridiculousness.

Not all of the book is great, though.  Parts do drag.  The history is fascinating, but the politics less so, and after a point the relationship between the Briton and Jamila has more or less been exhausted.  The book is lengthy because it manages to cover almost the entire crusade, but it also covers a great deal more.  I enjoyed it, but I’m not sure how much of that was remembering my favorite old history professor teaching in my head as opposed to how much I was genuinely enjoying the book.  I think this is certainly worth a try for historical fiction readers and history buffs, taken with a grain of salt.  It’s perhaps not Galland’s best book but I’ll still be eagerly awaiting her fourth novel.

IndieBound | Powell’s | Amazon

As a final note: has anyone read both this and The Fool’s Tale and think that the Briton is actually a certain character from that book, or am I crazy?

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