Pikkukuvaa napsauttamalla pääset Google Booksiin.
Ladataan... Louis XIVTekijä: Ian Dunlop
- Ladataan...
Kirjaudu LibraryThingiin nähdäksesi, pidätkö tästä kirjasta vai et. Ei tämänhetkisiä Keskustelu-viestiketjuja tästä kirjasta. 3766. Louis XIV, by Ian Dunlop (read Nov. 8, 2000) I had never read a Louis XIV bio, and this new one caught my eye. It is a very competent treatment, tho its excessive attention to architecture did not interest me too much. But the account of the War of the Spanish Succession was of high interest. Quite a good book, even if the subject is not at the top of subjects currently interesting me. näyttää 2/2 ei arvosteluja | lisää arvostelu
This text presents a portrait of the Sun King against the background of his era - one of the greatest periods for art, literature and architecture. It shows how he was seen at the time of his reign - as an inspirer and an enabler. Kirjastojen kuvailuja ei löytynyt. |
Current Discussions-Suosituimmat kansikuvat
Google Books — Ladataan... LajityypitMelvil Decimal System (DDC)944.033History and Geography Europe France and region France Bourbon 1589-1789 Louis XIV 1643-1715; War of Spanish succession ; XVIIth CenturyKongressin kirjaston luokitusArvio (tähdet)Keskiarvo:
Oletko sinä tämä henkilö? |
Chapters were divided by theme/event with loose chronology; the use of dates within each chapter was too jumbled and inconsistent. Would start a paragraph “In June…” and I’d have to go back a couple pages to see what year was last mentioned.
Architecture: it was a passion of Louis XIV, so it deserves a place in the story, but it seems to me it takes a pretty masterful storyteller to describe architecture to a reader who is not an architect, and particularly when many of the chateaux being described no longer exist. Dunlop isn’t that storyteller, though this may have been the time when the eyewitness accounts were most worthwhile, because they turned talk of columns and pilasters into a living impression of the time and place.
I loved the idea of contemporary quotation. The narrative voice is very weak, however—hardly strong enough to carry the load, and the transitions were ill-defined. People enter and leave the storyline without adequate introduction and minimal reader investment. “On such-and-such date, so-and-so wrote to so-and-so,” got really old, and was too often preceded or followed by simplistic commentary. This hurt the narrative especially when covering wartime and battles. It sometimes created the impression that, well, if we don’t have a quote about it, we won’t talk about it.
At the end Dunlop quotes Voltaire, “Time, which ripens men’s judgments…” And this is exactly what seems to be lacking from the book—the clarifying retrospect that the narrator should have brought to the subject.
Dunlop would occasionally (again, too often) quote a variety of other historians in the same manner that he quoted cotemporary sources (“Chandler comments:” … “Churchill writes:”). Hated that.
Toward the end I began to feel I was carrying 3000 pages for the content of 100. It may actually deserve a star or half-star less simply for its execution. ( )