Ancient & Medieval Historical Fiction discussion

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Michael Curtis Ford
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Huh? I remember Chip and Dale from when I was a kid....confused at what you mean though.
It kind of felt like you made an offhand remark about my taste in books.....if that was what it was...have you even seen my profile?
I don't read too many books with cartoonish covers, quite the opposite.

Her view on Scarrow is from a conversation she had with him on the content of his books, not anything to do with asthetics!

Now, MCF, I dig his covers. That is why they keep catching my eye.

You go alright in that department to, madam. :D




I think I have only one MCF on my tbr. I am going to struggle even finding a space to read that one! Plus my library doesn't have any MCF. That makes my chances of reading him anytime soon rather slim because I'll have to buy it.



Ah yes, Time. Far too little of it. It really is a great read, that one.
Cheers!

What’s wrong with being a slow reader? I am also a slow reader but I remember what I read. I know many readers that are much faster but when they are asked later what they read, they have forgotten it. I do most of my reading for pleasure but I still feel that I gain something else from it; I gain knowledge. Those fast readers that forget what they read, I think lose in the long run.

Nothing is wrong with being a slow reader, unless you're someone like me with weak impulse control and you tend to buy every third book you stumble across. I can only justify those purchases (and my ambitious Amazon wish list) if I actually read them. :)
Regarding reading comprehension, I've found that if anything my comprehension is better, since I'm more focused. The techniques I'm using deal more with training myself not to sound out each word mentally as I read, keeping my eyes from back-tracking, and getting myself in a focused state.



I find the other two culprits are dialogue, reading dialogue with the pauses and tone that one would say dialogue in real life, and punctuation. Stopping for commas and fullstops etc.
When I am in form for some speed reading, my biggest succeses come from reading straight through punctuation, and giving the words no tone.
Hi Thom,
I find that when I read too slow I have less memory for the book than when I speed read. I have no idea why this is so. It sounds strange, but there it is. :-)


1) The right to not read,
2) The right to skip pages,
3) The right to not finish a book,
4) The right to reread,
5) The right to read anything,
6) The right to "Bovary-ism," a textually-transmitted disease,
7) The right to read anywhere,
8) The right to sample and steal ("grappiller")
9) The right to read out-loud, and,
10) The right to be silent.
I especially like point number 3. :)



Agreed, I thought it was much better than his Julius Cesar series

I haven't tried that series yet. I've still got Scarrow and Sidebottom to finish up **cannot reach ... summit ... of to-be-read pile...**.


You may have better luck in the Conn Iggulden thread. Your post seems like something that would be of benefit to that discussion. :-)
http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/6...

I often see the books by Michael Curtis Ford around online but have never seen one in the flesh. ..."
I enjoyed this one very much. In fact, it led me to read the original Xenophon Anabasis-- Victorian English so difficult reading. I got my son a copy of the Ten Thousand for Christmas last year. Luckily our public library has 4 books by Michael Curtis Ford



Books mentioned in this topic
The Last King: Rome's Greatest Enemy (other topics)Pride of Carthage (other topics)
The Ten Thousand: A Novel of Ancient Greece (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Michael Curtis Ford (other topics)Conn Iggulden (other topics)
Daniel Pennac (other topics)
Michael Curtis Ford (other topics)
I often see the books by Michael Curtis Ford around online but have never seen one in the flesh. No-one seems to rave about them either. Not that they DON'T rave about them, they just don't get much mention anywhere.
I have always liked the look of this one.
The Ten Thousand: A Novel of Ancient Greece