Mod post: theme suggestions
May. 30th, 2009 03:59 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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Please suggest themes you'd like to see covered here! Cut and paste the following into a comment:
ETA: please put your theme in the subject of your comment!
Theme:
Are you prepared to run it? Yes/No
Suggested books, if you have them already:
What does it mean to run the theme?
1. At least one month in advance, you'll let everyone know about the theme and your suggested reading for it. You need to suggest at least 3 works of fiction.
2. On the first of the month, you will post a welcome/introduction/kickoff for the theme.
3. Throughout the month, you'll take an active part in discussion of the theme.
You do not have to be an expert on the theme to run it. You just need to have an interest in it.
ETA: please put your theme in the subject of your comment!
Theme:
Are you prepared to run it? Yes/No
Suggested books, if you have them already:
What does it mean to run the theme?
1. At least one month in advance, you'll let everyone know about the theme and your suggested reading for it. You need to suggest at least 3 works of fiction.
2. On the first of the month, you will post a welcome/introduction/kickoff for the theme.
3. Throughout the month, you'll take an active part in discussion of the theme.
You do not have to be an expert on the theme to run it. You just need to have an interest in it.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-31 05:17 am (UTC)Dorothy Dunnett.
Also Patricia Finney, who wrote two Elizabethan thrillers as Finney and a short series of mysteries set on the Borders as PF Chisholm.
There's a ton of Elizabethan fiction, the problem is separating the gold from the dross. And finding stuff on Gutenberg.
Re: US Civil War
Date: 2009-05-31 05:18 am (UTC)Re: Colonial-era Africa
Date: 2009-05-31 05:20 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-31 05:26 am (UTC)http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/1749
Major, Charles, 1856-1913
Title When Knighthood Was in Flower
or, the Love Story of Charles Brandon and Mary Tudor the King's Sister, and Happening in the Reign of His August Majesty King Henry the Eighth
http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/1860
Creator Kingsley, Charles, 1819-1875
Title Westward Ho!, or, the voyages and adventures of Sir Amyas Leigh, Knight, of Burrough, in the county of Devon, in the reign of her most glorious majesty Queen Elizabeth
http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/22942
Holt, Emily Sarah, 1836-1893
Title Clare Avery
A Story of the Spanish Armada
I bet a good library search for fiction published before 1920 with the subject of Tudor England would turn some stuff up, too, which we could then hunt down on Gutenberg. I'm guessing there are heaps we'd say "oh, of course!" about, if someone mentioned them.
Incidentally, I bet Elizabethan seafaring (Francis Drake, Spanish Armada, etc) could be a theme in its own right.
Re: US Civil War
Date: 2009-05-31 05:30 am (UTC)Wikipedia has a whole category for Civil War novels, too: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:American_Civil_War_novels
Oh... DUH. Of course we have to have Gone With the Wind.
Actually, that sounds like an awesome set of books to me. Little Women (contemporary), GWTW (1939), Killer Angels (1974), March (rewriting of Little Women), The Wind Done Gone (rewriting of GWTW).
no subject
Date: 2009-05-31 05:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-31 05:39 am (UTC)Re: US Civil War
Date: 2009-05-31 05:40 am (UTC)Re: Colonial-era Africa
Date: 2009-05-31 05:56 am (UTC)http://www.amazon.com/Chaka-African-Writers-Thomas-Mofolo/dp/0435902296
A fictionalised account of Chaka Zulu, pub. 1925.
http://www.amazon.com/Things-Fall-Apart-Chinua-Achebe/dp/0385474547
"One of Chinua Achebe's many achievements in his acclaimed first novel, Things Fall Apart, is his relentlessly unsentimental rendering of Nigerian tribal life before and after the coming of colonialism. First published in 1958, just two years before Nigeria declared independence from Great Britain, the book eschews the obvious temptation of depicting pre-colonial life as a kind of Eden. Instead, Achebe sketches a world in which violence, war, and suffering exist, but are balanced by a strong sense of tradition, ritual, and social coherence."
Some lists of African books:
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/indiv/africa/cuvl/Afbks.html
http://library.jccc.net/guides/literature/africannovel.html
I don't know veejane, but it doesn't look like she's on DW, or at least not under that name.
Re: Colonial-era Africa
Date: 2009-05-31 05:59 am (UTC)And yes, Achebe is worth reading--Things Fall Apart was, IIRC, written as an explicit response to Conrad.
Re: Colonial-era Africa
Date: 2009-05-31 06:05 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-31 12:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-31 12:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-31 12:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-31 01:00 pm (UTC)Re: Gold Rushes
Date: 2009-05-31 02:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-31 02:30 pm (UTC)Homosexuality in the 1930s
Cold War America
The Boer War
Fin de siècle Europe
18th-century Korea
(The Red Queen by Margaret Drabble wasn't very good but it sure made me want to learn more about the period.)
Imperial Russia
Egyptology in Fiction
Re: Plagues and pandemics
Date: 2009-05-31 03:56 pm (UTC)Re: Plagues and pandemics
Date: 2009-05-31 04:14 pm (UTC)The Midnight Queen, May Agnes Fleming. Gutenberg text, late 19th-century Gothic about London's Great Plague.
no subject
Date: 2009-05-31 05:27 pm (UTC)Re: Gold Rushes
Date: 2009-05-31 05:53 pm (UTC)Re: Plagues and pandemics
Date: 2009-05-31 05:55 pm (UTC)Re: Plagues and pandemics
Date: 2009-05-31 05:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-31 05:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-05-31 06:03 pm (UTC)Boer War would be great as I suspect there are a range of books with different perspectives.
Egyptology, YES. Have to have an Amelia Peabody mystery in there, for starters. (I read one and didn't like it, but that doesn't mean it's not a good candidate.)