(I celebrated the semester's imminent demise by, um, exacerbating the current shelving problem. Some of the books were free, though.)
- Florence Gregg, Bartholomew Legate: The Last Smithfield Martyr (Swan Sonnenschein, 1886). Historical novel about a man burned at the stake in 1612 for heresy. More background here.
- Kathryn Davis, Hell: A Novel (Back Bay Books, 2003). Dollhouses, 1950s houses...
- Graham Swift, Shuttlecock (Vintage, 1992). Is the narrator insane, or is something inimical going on?
- ---, Out of this World (Vintage, 1993). A photographer and his ravaged family.
- John Gardner, Jason and Medeia (Vintage, 1986). The Greek myth with a twist.
- John Barth, Chimera (Mariner, 2001). More Greek myths, served up with a side helping of Scheherezade.
- Julian Barnes, A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters (Vintage, 1990). World history, definitely askew. (This was one of those "why don't I own this novel already, anyway?" purchases.)
- Virginia Woolf, Night and Day (Harvest, 1973). Pre-WWI romance.
- Ian R. MacLeod, The Light Ages (Ace, 2004). The Victorians, albeit with magic.
- ---, The House of Storms (Ace, 2005). Sequel to the above.
- Benjamin Markovits, Imposture: A Novel (Norton, 2007). Historical novel about John Polidori.
- Sir Walter Scott, Manners, Customs, and History of The Highlanders of Scotland (Barnes & Noble, 2004). Originally published in 1816.
- Donald K. McKim, ed., Historical Handbook of Major Biblical Interpreters (InterVarsity, 1998). Encyclopedia of exegesis from the beginning to the present.
Hello Little Professor,
I think I like your blog. Have a nice day.
Posted by: PODler | April 29, 2007 at 12:06 PM