Submitted by History_fangirl t3_10nalkr in books
History_fangirl OP t1_j67qlfs wrote
Reply to comment by pleasereadthanks in 1st case by James Patterson are all his books like this? by History_fangirl
Haha. I suppose itโs what sells, easy books to read for pleasure. I do like to be intellectually challenged a bit when I read ๐ any other crime authors you think I should give a try?
pleasereadthanks t1_j67qz6w wrote
Sorry I edited my above comment but you might have missed it.
If you like historical fiction, James Ellroy does Crime thrillers set mostly in LA in the 1950s and he's sensational
Also have you heard of In The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco? It's a medieval Detective story.
I also like James M. Cain, Michael Connelly and Richard Stark for noir type stuff.
History_fangirl OP t1_j67smrz wrote
Thanks so much those books sound interesting and Iโll give them a go ๐
Irulantk t1_j67svpn wrote
If you like a mix of historical fiction and historical fantasy try Elizabeth Kostova
History_fangirl OP t1_j67t0rn wrote
Ooo Iโve heard of her. Thank you Iโll add her to my wish list ๐
Irulantk t1_j67t41n wrote
My favorite was The Historian by her, but its also her longest work (and imo best).
Writerhowell t1_j683bo0 wrote
If you like historical crime, there are the Amelia Peabody books by Elizabeth Peters (set in Egypt primary, turn of the century) and the Father Cadfael books by Ellis Peters (he's a monk). Agatha Christie's books are also generally excellent to read, quite devious, and they're set around WW2-ish. She wrote for decades. They were contemporary at the time, but are definitely more historical now.
Irulantk t1_j67tcf0 wrote
I tried reading In the name of a rose. But i just couldnt. Ive read novels with that kind of language/writing style before fine but i just couldnt with this one. It killed my will to read for 6 months lol. Cause i was on i think chapter 5? But i cant DNF books, i hate doing so. So i couldnt start another book without finishing that one. So it just killed my will to read. Until i coaxed myself into letting go lol
Does it get interesting? Cause i dont wanna spend 2 chapters describing a building again
pleasereadthanks t1_j67tseh wrote
It's dense that's for sure, I loved getting sucked into that world and plowed through it, but I could see how it's not to everyone's tastes.
Irulantk t1_j67txj2 wrote
Yes, its very verbose, i was very into it until they reached the cathedral/abbey/whatever it was. Might give it another go
Cruciverbalist t1_j68hjdn wrote
Christian Cameron writes wonderful medieval fiction with a strong basis is reality.
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