skygiants: Princess Tutu, facing darkness with a green light in the distance (land beyond dreams)
skygiants ([personal profile] skygiants) wrote2008-11-19 01:45 pm

(no subject)

My library books are overflowing my shelf! I have been trying so hard to keep my return rate higher than my check-out rate, so I went to the library and returned four books yesterday on the way to my dance class . . . and walked out with five. In my defense, two of them are extremely short! Um.

Anyways, booklogging: I forget where I heard the existence of Amin Maalouf's The Crusades Through Arab Eyes mentioned, but since I still have a whole slew of Crusades facts buzzing around in my head from the class I took my final semester at school I was definitely intrigued. And rightfully! I had read several of the Arab sources on the Crusades that he uses in class, but it was very cool to have someone string them all together into a coherent narrative, focusing mostly on the time period from the First Crusade through the Fourth. Admittedly I got a little confused between all the different sultans and emirs, but that is because one of them was assassinated literally every other page, which made it somewhat tricky to keep track. The levels of infighting were fascinating and ridiculous, on both sides. The author also has a giant crush on Saladin, but it's hard to blame him, because really who doesn't? (He has his own animated TV show in Malaysia!)

I do wish Maalouf had used even more of the primary source material than he did, but I am spoiled; my favorite Crusades text is still Jean de Joinville's Chronicles of the Crusades, which is a primary source narrative from the Fourth Crusade and awesome. I do get the impression Maalouf interpolates more primary narrative than a lot of history texts do. I also really liked his epilogue, in which he delves a little bit into the possible consequences of the Crusades for contemporary relations, and I sort of wish he'd had the room to go into that more. Anyways, recommended for anyone who has an interest in medieval history.
ext_6382: Blue-toned picture of cow with inquisitive expression (Default)

[identity profile] bravecows.livejournal.com 2008-11-19 07:36 pm (UTC)(link)
(He has his own animated TV show in Malaysia!)

I know the dude who writes that! :D I promised to nominate it for Yuletide next year, haha. I don't think it's out yet, though.
ext_21673: ([mi5] a place for your breath)

[identity profile] fahye.livejournal.com 2008-11-19 08:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Have I told you to read Catherine Jinks' Pagan Chronicles yet? Because I can 100% guarantee that you will ADORE them. I babbled about them a bit here (http://fahye.livejournal.com/452644.html) and then had a minor continued squeefest in the comments to the post.

[identity profile] avariel-wings.livejournal.com 2008-11-19 08:43 pm (UTC)(link)
The author also has a giant crush on Saladin, but it's hard to blame him, because really who doesn't?

I know I do! Seriously, even the less-rabidly-bigoted Crusaders thought he was awesome.
ceitfianna: (Wyeth Cover)

[personal profile] ceitfianna 2008-11-19 09:51 pm (UTC)(link)
I have the same problem. I think I always have at least two books out, possibly one on hold since the library here is small.

That sounds really interesting, I love that era which is partially why I'm such a Robin Hood fan.