Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Lempriere's Dictionary
Lempriere's Dictionary | Lawrence Norfolk
4 posts | 4 read | 7 to read
Not since the publication of Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose has a novelist created such a mesmerizing mix of murder, intrigue, and historical detail. In Lempriere's Dictionary, Lawrence Norfolk weaves these elements into an epic tale of institutional greed and passionate revenge, all set against a rich backdrop of classical mythology. At the heart of this spellbinding story are three seemingly unrelated historical events: as the seventeenth century opens, a band of venturers forms the Honorable Company of Merchants, trading from England to the East Indies - the East India Company; meanwhile in France, a city is burned and thirty thousand men, women, and children are massacred - the siege of La Rochelle; and almost two centuries later, John Lempriere writes his celebrated dictionary of classical mythology - Lempriere's Dictionary. This much is fact. Norfolk's extraordinary fiction shows how the first two events led inescapably to the third. Told with the narrative drive of a political thriller and a Dickensian panorama of place and time, this astonishing tale encompasses the Great Voyages of Discovery, multinational financial conspiracies, a centuries-old murderous feud, and central to these, the fevered writing of John Lempriere's dictionary. Appearing throughout is a glorious cast of scholars and eccentrics, drunken aristocrats, whores and assassins, paranoid magistrates, and octogenarian pirates, all brilliantly depicted across three continents and the world of classical mythology.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
blurb
Ast_Arslan
Lempriere's Dictionary | Lawrence Norfolk
post image

@Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks
@Eggs
#FallTreasures

Day 16 - #ThriftStoreFind

Some books collected from a thrift store all over the years 🤟🏻❤

Eggs ❤️📚❤️ 3y
17 likes1 comment
blurb
Ast_Arslan
Lempriere's Dictionary | Lawrence Norfolk
post image

I am posting one book per day from my to-be-read collection. No description and providing no reason for wanting to read it. Some will be old, some will be new - don't judge me, I have a lot of books.

Day 13th

Join the fun if you want!

#tbrpile

blurb
Leniverse
Lemprire's Dictionary | Lawrence Norfolk
post image

#ILikeBigBooks and here are some of them. (I tend to read big books on the kindle these days, for portability.) I left out the "complete/selected works of" books because that seemed like cheating, though I love them passionately. I also left out the text books and dictionaries, except for Lempriere's which isn't really a dictionary at all. #booktober @RealLifeReading

19 likes1 stack add
blurb
MrBook
Lemprire's Dictionary | Lawrence Norfolk
post image

So here's the borrowing part of yesterday's #libraryhaul. #Coale spent a great deal of time sniffing out their pasts, I guess from previous patrons, lol. Anything stick out to you as yah or blah?

Shemac77 Alan Bradley! Big, huge, overly enthusiastic YAY!! 8y
RealLifeReading What @Shemac77 said. ❤️Flavia de Luce 8y
Nuwanda Love Flavia and Horrorstor! 8y
See All 22 Comments
LeahBergen Yep. I'm a Flavia fan, too. 8y
[DELETED] 3323341091 Elementary Particles 😬 8y
bookandcat Bradley and Erik Larson are great, horrorstor is supposed to be great (tried reading it in ebook from the library but it just doesn't work in that format) 8y
bookandcat What's the book farthest left in the lower row? 8y
Cobscook I'd like to try Horrorstor. 8y
Godmotherx5 I want to try Horrorstor, too. 8y
Kathrin I love me some Houellebecq! I read Submission this year and it's such a gripping book! 8y
MrBook @Shemac77 @RealLifeReading @Nuwanda @LeahBergen @bookandcat A lot of Bradley fans, I see 😊👍🏻! @Nuwanda @bookandcat @Cobscook @Godmotherx5 And a lot of Horrorstor familiarity as well 😎👌🏻. @fern @Kathrin Yep, good tastes are to be found on #Litsy 😁👏🏻👍🏻. @bookandcat Thousand Splendid Suns, but that was a buy 😊. 8y
Dogearedcopy 'In the Garden of Beasts' was barely passable as a So-So read. It takes most if it's material from the diary of a diplomat & his daughter during Hitler's rise in 1930s Germany. The book is oddly shallow and carries very little tension :-/ 8y
MrBook @Dogearedcopy Thank you for your insight 😊👍🏻. Perhaps we can banter about it when I'm done with it 😁👏🏻. 8y
Dogearedcopy I made the mistake of listening to 'The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie' on audio. The narrator, Jayne Entwistle was absolutely perfect for the role - and that was ultimately the problem: Flavia came across as too precocious for my tastes, nails-on-chalkboard-annoying. I never could get her voice out of my head even when I tried just reading in print! I think those who just read her, as opposed to listening to her, like her better! 8y
Ammar25 I enjoyed sweetness at the bottom of the pie 8y
MrBook @Dogearedcopy Lol, audio can do that to you 😂👏🏻👍🏻. @Ammar25 Awesome 😊👏🏻👍🏻!!! 8y
missjenniferlowe I have trouble with the audio, too, @Dogearedcopy ! The narrator sounds too amused sometimes or something. I haven't tried reading one yet but hope it goes better. 8y
MrBook @missjenniferlowe 😊👍🏻👌🏻! 8y
Gennic I read Horrorstör earlier this summer! It was so funny 8y
MrBook @NicoleGentry 😁👏🏻👍🏻👌🏻! 8y
LiteraryLona Horrorstor was great! My Best Friend's Exorcism is gold too, if you like this one! 8y
MrBook @LiteraryLona Ah, yes, I've seen that one make the rounds here on Litsy 😊👍🏻. 8y
116 likes2 stack adds22 comments