a Heresy » Dogberry Pages

April is more than half over and I still don’t have my list of books read during March posted. I have been diligently reading and it looks like I am well ahead of my goal of reading a book a week. If reading is my superpower, then seven books succumbed to me in March and I have vanquished 19 during the first 13 weeks of this year. This puts me ahead of schedule in one area of my life.



Title: The Book Thief
Author: Markus Zusak
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
Germany during World War II. Death is rampant. The story of Liesel Meminger, the book thief, is told by Death, a kind of Grim Reaper figure. This was a very interesting way to tell the story of Nazi Germany, showing those who followed the evil regime, those who secretly fought against it, and those who were broken by it. In the midst of man's inhumanity to his fellow man there are those who are willing to fight against evil.

I listened to the audio book version and enjoyed it tremendously. This was a great book. Highly recommend it to young adults.


Title: Trust Agents
Author: Chris Brogan
Author: Julien Smith
Trust Agents: Using the Web to Build Influence, Improve Reputation, and Earn Trust by Chris Brogan & Julien Smith
The book says: "We’ve taken what we’ve learned from our years as "digital natives" (people who have grown up inhabiting the various online haunts of the moment), combined it with our understanding of games, people, and business as a whole, and followed it all up with information and ideas to help you better understand the mindset required to match these actions to your business needs." The authors give a lot of anectotal evidence of why businesses should use social software and build their online brand. The verdict: Be Real, Be Helpful, Be Successful.


Title: Heresy
Author: S.J. Parris
Heresy by S.J. Parris
An excommunicated monk travels to Oxford to seek an old book but instead finds himself entangled in some gruesome murders fashioned after Foxe's Book of Martyrs.

The book does pretty well placing the story in its historical context. I was intrigued by both the story and the history.


Title: Seized
Author: Max Hardberger
Seized by Max Hardberger
This book tells some of the amazing adventures of Max Hardberger. ‘Stealing’ ships out from under the nose of foreign governments, sneaking planes out of East Germany a week prior to reunification, and acting as an intermediary for buyers in some pretty unusual sitiuations. The amazing adventures would be great to hear first hand, sitting at a bar over a beer or two.

This was a fun and interesting read. Sometimes the writing was as rough as the author but that almost made me feel more like i was sitting in the bar with the author listening to him relate the story in his own words.


Title: Absolute Power
Author: David Baldacci
Absolute Power by David Baldacci
Protecting the President. Killing someone who was defending themself from the President. Cover-up. It is a slippery slope that catches you off guard when you start doing the wrong things for what appear to be right reasons. Or is it just rationalization?


Title: Right Ho, Jeeves
Author: P.G. Wodehouse
Right Ho, Jeeves by P.G. Wodehouse
From The Classic Tales Podcast
This multi-part podcast was well narated and fun to listen to though at times I do begin to wonder if English society is really as vapid as it appears in these stories.


Title: House Rules
Author: Jodi Picoult
House Rules by Jodi Picoult
The story allows us to look at the world from a different vantage point and realize how confusing much of what we take for granted can be, especially for someone who cannot differentiate between literal and figurative speech.

Bible: Contemporary English Version by God
My 30 minutes of audio Bible reading each morning allowed me to finish reading the New Testament and probably half of the Old Testament by the end of the month. I have changed up the order that I am reading the books (decided I needed to simplify) and so lost the exact list of books I finished in the Old Testament.

Title: Heresy
Author: S.J. Parris
Started: 02/25/2010
Finished: 03/16/2010
Source: ARC from Publisher

From the back cover:

Oxford. 1583. The cloistered academic and spiritual home of the most revered scholars in the world. But somewhere within the private chambers of the university, a brutal killer lurks. . .

Giordano Bruno — monk, scientist, philosopher, and magician — is wanted by the Inquisition on charges of heresy for his belief in a heliocentric universe. After years on the run throughout Europe, Bruno is mysteriously recruited by Queen Elizabeth I and sent to Oxford on the pretext of a royal visitation. Officially, Bruno is to take part in a debate on Copernican theory; unofficially, he is to find out whatever he can about a Catholic plot to overthrow the queen.

But before Bruno’s investigations commence, his mission is dramatically thrown off course when Oxford fellows begin to turn up dead. As he discovers a pattern in the murders, he realizes that he isn’t the only one harboring secrets and that no one at Oxford is who he appears to be.

From the gothic manors of the English countryside to the seedy taverns and mysterious bookshops outside the university gates, Bruno’s search for clues takes him to places he never knew existed and toward revelations that could threaten the stability of England.

Based on the real-life adventures of Giordano Bruno, this clever and vastly entertaining whodunit is written with the unstoppable narrative propulsion and stylistic flair of the very best historical thrillers.

The book claims to be historical fiction, so when I read that the main character believed not only that the earth was not the center of the solar system but that the universe was not centered around the solar system I had my doubts. Some quick research proved me wrong. The author has done a great job placing this story within an accurate historical context and tells a very plausible story.

The story unfolds without giving any hints as to who was responsible for the gruesome murders that occur shortly after Bruno, the main character, arrives at Oxford. You will not know who is responsible until he confesses at the end of the book. What captivated me was not the mystery but the ‘historicity’. You find yourself imersed in the period, a period that is so alien to us today. Church and State are so intertwined that one cannot be a loyal citizen without also holding to the state religion. Simply attending the wrong church service or possessing the wrong books is not just heresy but treason.

We say goodbye to Bruno but I have a strong suspicion that he will return to tell another tale.

Other Book Blogger Reviews
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Title: Heresy
Author: S.J. Parris
Sentence: A chill wind chivvied the dark rain clouds in drifts across the sky, revealing a higher layer of pearl-grey cloud as the rain thinned and finally ceased altogether.
Page: 248

Word: chivvy
Definition:
  • to fret; harass; nag
  • to manipulate
  • [Brit.] to hunt; chase
   Source: YourDictionary.com

Interesting word, not sure I will ever be able to use it. In looking for uses of the word on the web it was interesting that 2 of the first uses I found also were in relation to clouds:

The clouds that had chivvied Lord Peter on his way back from Trinity swelled still more ominously as evening approached, and shortly before midnight they let down their burden with a savage fervour.

The Incident of the Fellow in the Fellows’ Garden

If I were a CIO—and especially one being chivvied into cloud computing by a CEO hot to trot based on an article in The Economist….

CIO.com


Title: Heresy
Author: S.J. Parris
Page: 81
How is it that men think women are too frail to look on blood? Do you forget we bleed every month? We push out babies in great puddles of gore, do you imagine we hide our eyes when we do that, in case it offends our delicate senses? I promise you, Doctor Bruno, any woman can look on blood with more fortitude than a soldier, though men think we must be treated like Venice glass. Do not be one more who wants to wrap me up in linen and keep me in a box.

Point!

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