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#canterburytales
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intothehallofbooks
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My favorite from January was this excellent medieval fiction which is sort of adjacent to The Canterbury Tales. I loved this book so much. Medieval fiction is my favorite. I loved the perspective on how life could have been for women during the 1300‘s. It was so entertaining to me. I just felt like I was THERE, right in the story.

Thank you for hosting #12Booksof2023, @Andrew65!

Andrew65 Sounds brilliant. 4mo
30 likes1 stack add1 comment
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bibliothecarivs
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Recent acquisitions (birthday gifts from my family):

📖 Chaucer's Tale: 1386 and the Road to Canterbury by Paul Strohm
📖 Robin Hood by Reginald de Koven, Adapted by Lous von Haupt as a Children's Opera-Story to be Played, Read, Sung, or Informally Dramatized
📖 English Literature at the Close of the Middle Ages by E.K. Chambers

#UniteAgainstBookBans #fREADom

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Kris10H
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Pickpick

Book #2
My Rating: 4.5/5
The extent of my knowledge about Chaucer lies mostly in his depiction in A Knight's Tale, but that didn't stop me from reading this story from the POV of his famous "Wife of Bath". This story was surprising in its development of the wife's character from young child bride, to strong, feminist woman, and I enjoyed every minute of it. Definitely worth reading.

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catiewithac
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Pickpick

I‘m glad my library didn‘t get this book until March because it paired nicely with Lana Del Rey‘s new album. It‘s empowering to read about an outspoken, provocative and smart woman character from the 14th century while listening to a current day one. Marion Turner allows Alison of Bath to shine her light on enduring misogyny and how women will ever be irrepressible! 👯‍♀️

60 likes2 stack adds
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intothehallofbooks
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I finished five books in January and my favorites are pictured here. The Good Wife of Bath was my favorite because of its time period, followed very closely by Blacktop Wasteland. I‘ve loved everything I‘ve read by RaeAnne Thayne; her no-stress, easy-reading stories are like balm to my soul.

I also finished Christmas Bells by Jennifer Chiaverini and You‘ve Lost a Lot of Blood by Eric LaRocca, both of which were disappointing.

#JanuaryReads

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intothehallofbooks
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Pickpick

I really loved this. This is one possible story of the Wife of Bath, who appears in Chaucer‘s The Canterbury Tales. Most of the book is her story from age 12 on thru her adulthood, until just after Chaucer writes her into his Tales. She gives us a wonderfully detailed glimpse of a non-royal working woman‘s life during the 1300‘s, with successes and setbacks over and over.

The audiobook is fantastic. Beautifully narrated by Fran Burgoyne.

39 likes3 stack adds
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intothehallofbooks
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My mug was an impulse buy at Target, money well spent, and I love it so much!! I am indeed a Dog Person.

Also still loving this book! I‘m almost halfway done and my favorite part is the way it examines how women lived during the Middle Ages. The MC Eleanor is a force!! I love her. And Geoffrey Chaucer is a secondary character 🥰

DGRachel I have this on audiobook and it‘s a potential selection for one of my reading challenges. I may have to move it to the top of my list! 1y
intothehallofbooks @DGRachel I‘m listening to the audiobook when I drive or cook, and you will love the audio! The narrator is wonderful. 1y
Pageturner1 cute mug 😍 1y
TheKidUpstairs I loved this one. So glad to see it getting a bit more attention! 1y
38 likes4 comments
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intothehallofbooks
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“In the Middle Ages, a famous poet told a story that mocked a strong woman. It became a literary classic. But what if the woman in question had a chance to tell her own version?”

My first read of the new year! I love love love The Canterbury Tales and am very excited to see what life Ms Brooks has imagined for Chaucer‘s Wife of Bath. Three chapters in and I think I‘m going to love it!

LeahBergen This sounds good. 👍 1y
31 likes1 stack add1 comment
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TheKidUpstairs
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#12Booksof2022 On the fourth day of Christmas, my reading gave to me...an overlooked slice of history.

Karen Brooks gives full, genuine, delightful, witty, resilient, and often frustrating life to Chaucer's Wife of Bath in this engaging historical fiction.

@Andrew65

Andrew65 Sounds brilliant. 1y
Aimeesue The ebook's on sale today in the US too! 1y
Chelsea.Poole Good job writing that verse lol 👏 you put this on my radar from your #auldlangspine list and I‘m hoping to get to it next year sometime! 1y
TheKidUpstairs @Chelsea.Poole Thanks, it's fun trying to make them rhyme and fit the rhythm of the line! I'm happy to introduce more people to this one, I feel like it flew totally beneath the radar. I kept seeing it at my library and was intrigued enough to check it out, it had no other Litsy reviews or mentions. Sometimes it's great to go in totally blind. There was one other one I went into in 2022 with absolutely no fore-knowledge and it was also a fave: 1y
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