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37. World Without End - the Global Empire of Philip II by Hugh Thomas

Oh dear, I can't believe I read the whole thing.

I have fond memories of his earlier works, The Slave Trade and The Conquest of Mexico. The first volume of this series, Rivers of Gold, is dense but informative. Volume two was pretty painful, as was this (but was shorter). It works neither as narrative nor analysis. It doesn't answer basic questions that a novice like me to, say, the exploration of Paraguay, has, nor is there any meaningful consideration of much of anything. I could rant for ages but the basic take-home is just don't.

I'm still looking for a decent account of the Spanish in South America and I'm beginning to wonder if the answer is become a lot more fluent in Spanish. There's a lot of material on Mexico and the Inca, but not a lot about the more obscure parts that I'm interested in.

Oh, and the maps are crap and relegated to the back so you can imagine how I feel about that.
inulro: (Default)
I am so far behind with this.

45. The Golden Age: The Spanish Empire of Charles V by Hugh Thomas

The second part of Thomas' history of the Spanish empire. Where Rivers of Gold was dense but fascinating, this was just dense. This was a surprise - as I mentioned in my review of Rivers of Gold, I've read some of his earlier books and they've always been readable.

Somehow he made the discovery and conquest of Peru not that exciting, ditto the first voyage down the Amazon.

I struggled with this till the end because it was full of things I wanted to know, but it just got too bogged down in names and backgrounds in Spain of all the characters. Also it doesn't help that my stupid brain has to pronounce all the Spanish words in Spanish, but unlike French (which happens in the lizard brain), this makes me slow right down.

I learned a lot, it was just hard. Now I'm sitting here eyeing the last volume with suspicion - I got the first two from the library, but as they didn't have the third one yet I bought it.

46. In the Miso Soup by Ryu Murakami

No, not the cool Murakami (who I went off some years ago, law of diminishing returns and all that, but who is at least sound in principle). Last month's bibliogoths book.

It was short and easy to read, but nothing about it appealed to me. If he was making any statements about Japanese society he was doing it with a sledgehammer. I've already read a lot about Japan's lost decade in the 90s, so it wasn't even like I was learning anything. It rambles and doesn't make sense.


47. Exploring Old Highway Number 1 West: Canada's Route 66 by J Clark Saunders

Bought this in the gift shop of the Moose Jaw tunnels mainly for the photos, which are superb. I feel like a bad Canadian, but I didn't know what a recent creation the Trans Canada Highway is, and that it's changed its route over the years. This book is a lovely nostalgia trip from the Ontario/Manitoba border to Victoria, BC. I've been on all of it over the years, but only as a means to an end. I now want to do it as a longer road trip taking time to see all the really nifty things along the way (which you sort of forget are really pretty or really cool because you live there, and because you have standard Prairie memories of your dad shoving the whole family in the car and driving for 12 hours, so that if you did see something cool, it's not like you ever would have been allowed to stop and look).

I highly recommend this book. The photos, as I said, are gorgeous, and the text is evocative of a Western Canada which I am barely old enough to have known.

48. The Last Dragonslayer by Jasper Fforde

I bought the third volume when Jasper was speaking earlier this year. He was a guest at BristolCon in October so I grabbed the first and second books off the Forbidden Planet stall so I could get him to sign them (so I could tell him how much I love the line "honour is what happens when you weaponise manners".

I know they're aimed at the lower end of the YA spectrum, but I love these books so much. They are very funny, there is adventure and peril and some quite dark moments too.

49. The Taxidermist's Daughter by Kate Mosse

Of Mosse's previous work, I thought Labyrinth and Citadel are OK, and I loved Sepulchre and The Winter Ghosts, so I got this one from the library just in case.

I really rated this one. It's set in Sussex in 1912. The title character lives in isolation with her father, who used to be a famous taxidermist, but taxidermy has gone out of fashion and there's little work any more. She had a head injury when she was 12 and can't remember anything about her life before they moved to Fishbourne. Then the past catches up with them.

The actual plot and back story are OK, but nothing to write home about. However, the atmosphere is something else. It's low-level creepy right from the beginning and the suspenseful bit are well written, and the storm and floods which are the climax of the book are incredibly real. Maybe because we just lived through a winter of similar floods, but still. Also it was really easy going and I finished it really quickly. Definitely recommended.
inulro: (Default)
38. Rivers of Gold: The Rise of the Spanish Empire by Hugh Thomas

Many years ago I read Thomas's The Slave Trade and The Conquest of Mexico. I've been vaguely aware that he'd been working on an enlarged history of the Spanish empire but it wasn't until the third volume hit the shops recently, that I took notice. Fortunately the library not only carries the first two, they were in stock. I've treated myself and bought the third.

Rivers of Gold is the first and covers the period roughly from Columbus's first voyage to Magellan/Elcano's circumnavigation of the world. It covers not only the exploration and settlement in the New World, but also what was going on in Spain and how that affected policy with respect to the New World.

Having read a lot about the conquest and settlement of Mexico, those histories always gloss over the Spanish settlements that preceded Mexico, and this book satisfyingly fills in that bit of history.

I found it hard going - there are a lot of names and places, and you never know which ones to store away for later. But it's well written and interesting.

You probably have to be my sort of history nerd for this to appeal to you, but it is very good at what it does.

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