- Ruth Downie's Caveat Emptor & Medicus
- The Forever Queen by Helen Hollick
- C.C. Humphrey's Vlad: The Last Confession
- Conn Iggulden's Khan: Empire of Silver
- George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series (I'll wait for A Dance With Dragons when HBO's Game of Thrones season 2 is done next year)
- The Borgia Betrayal by Sara Poole
- A book by one of my absolute favorites, the woman who inspired my love of historical fiction, Persia Woolley in a re-release of Queen of the Summer Stars.
A summer of books |
- Cinders by Michelle Davidson Argyle
- Elizabeth Chadwick's For the King's Favor
- Mel Comley's Impending Justice
- Blockbuster by Sven Michael Davison
- Alison DeLuca's The Night Watchman Express
- In Her Name: Empire, by Micheal Hicks
- The Vampire Relationship Guide, Volume 1: Meeting and Mating by Evelyn LaFont
- Cartier's Ring by Pearson Moore
- Cate Rowan's Kismet's Kiss
- The Black God's War by Moses Siregar III
- Lindsay Townsend's To Touch the Knight & A Knight's Vow
- Mike Wells' Wild Child
- The House of Women by Anne Whitfield
- Sarah Woodbury's The Last Pendragon
What are your summer reading plans? What are you looking forward to the most?
7 comments:
DAMN. No wonder you're so prolific on HNR. I get stuck reading folks Dissertations on the rise and fall of the Seleucid Empire or the Rise and Fall of the Han Dynasty (you know I'm not kidding) and it will take me months to get through some of this stuff. If I can. Most of it, the library will only let me borrow for three weeks and it costs big bucks to buy. I miss reading for fun. I remember I used to do that. Now, I read to do reviews, I read for research for my own books OR to find an agent or publisher. Half the time, even if I'm enjoying a book, I don't seem to have time to finish before it's due back! Can't afford to actually BUY books right now. Grrrr.
I'm honored that my two books are on your list! I have yours on my Kindle, but my list is mammoth, too. :(
Oh, whoops, you only have Cinders on there. My bad. Still, I'm honored!
Victoria, sorry, but I live for the academic stuff. I would give something of real significance to me for a month's JSTOR subscription! If I didn't write his fic, I think I'd be a librarian or researcher. I have been known to lose hours or perhaps years to my own research, you know, those hours that should be spent writing.
Michelle, I started Cinders tonight! Trouble in paradise from page one. All that blood on the kitchen floor too. This is definitely not "and they lived happily ever after!" Back to my reading.
Lisa - the blood in the kitchen scene is my fave. Hope you enjoy the rest!
Oh, don't get me wrong! I love the research, too. I don't think I could write his fiction if I didn't. But when I'm researching, I'm stopping to take notes, I'm thinking about all of it in an analytical, disjointed fashion that doesn't let me just devour the material for the sheer joy of it. And of course, there's research material that's engaging and enjoyable to read (even if you have to stop to take notes, you KNOW there are glorious gems in the notes you're taking) and then there's the kind of material that will put you to sleep. LOL
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