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| SFReader Forums > SFReader > Ask The Expert > History book recommendation | Forum Quick Jump
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 |  PaulMc Adept

       Date Joined May 2005 Total Posts : 986 | Posted 4/29/2008 11:05 AM (GMT -4) |   | Kuroboshii said... Hey, all, I'm just wondering if anyone can recommend a good book on daily life/food/clothing/society in 17/18th century Europe. I'm contemplating a swashbuckling fantasy novel with that general level of technology and society, and if I do attempt it, I want a setting that really comes alive. Info about court dances, styles, superstitions. . .anything you can think of! Books on arms & armor wouldn't hurt either, especially if there's anything with cool info about a soldier's everyday life. I'll probably also pick up something on piracy, given the background of one of my characters. . .. Me, too.
Not the swashbuckler thing, but I find it hard to find mundane day-to-day details of 18th century life unless I actually go to a museum or National Park. Plenty of military data - soldiering and sailing. I find myself hunting for these details for my Doran Coyle character.
While not non-fiction references, some of the Sharpe books and Susanna Clarke's Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell had some good details.
If you want sailing and soldiering circa the American Revolution, there are some very good books by Illustrated Living History. Fully illustrated weapons, uniforms, etc.
www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/search-handle-url?%5Fencoding=UTF8&search-type=ss&index=books&field-author=C.%20Keith%20Wilbur -- Paul McNamee
My Writings | | Back to Top | | |
    |  Frank Adept

       Date Joined Aug 2005 Total Posts : 627 | Posted 4/29/2008 6:11 PM (GMT -4) |   | | Non-Fiction:
The Handbook to Life in Renaissance Europe by Sandra Sider (mostly cultural reference: politics, religion, some art & architecture stuff)
Daily Life In Renaissance Italy by E. & T. Cohen (sociological reference)
The Civilization of Europe in the Renaissance by John Hale (some stuff about the nitty-gritty of daily life but also a lot about cultural and political attitudes)
Renaissance Europe 1480-1520 by John Hale (mostly sociological)
Daily Life in 18th Century England by Kirstin Olsen (some daily grind stuff)
The Extraordinary Origins of Everyday Things by Charles Panati (not 17th or 18th century specific but contains spatterings that include technological innovations of the period you're looking for)
The Evolution of Useful Things by Henry Petroski (I recommend this title, the section about food utensils alone will have you appeciating our modern age so much more)
The Art of Renaissance Warfare by Stephen Turnbull
Weapons & Warfare in Renaissance Europe by Bert Hall
The Renaissance Drill Book by Jacob de Gheyn (period book, believe it or not still in print)
The Medieval Machine by Jean Gimpel (can't recommend this book enough, even though it focuses on AD900-1300, you'll have a much better grasp of technology leading up to the renaissance)
European Weapons & Armor From the Renaissance to the Industrial Revolution by Ewart Oakeshott
The Martial Arts of Renaissance Europe by Sydney Anglo
Fiction:
Girl With A Pearl Earring by Tracy Chevalier
The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas
any of the works of Patrick O'Brian
Lord Hornblower by C.S. Forester
The Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco (and several other works by the same author)
The Agony & the Ecstasy by Irving Stone
Niccolo Rising by Dorothy Dunnett
Journal of the Plague Year by Daniel Defoe
The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio | | Back to Top | | |
 |  Anthony G Williams Greybeard

       Date Joined Apr 2007 Total Posts : 380 | Posted 4/30/2008 4:55 AM (GMT -4) |   | | | |
  |  Frank Adept

       Date Joined Aug 2005 Total Posts : 627 | Posted 5/3/2008 12:04 PM (GMT -4) |   | | The Men At Arms series from Osprey is a goldmine of information, and probably you're best bet as a quick reference source for military history, especially concerning weapons, armor/uniforms and other soldier gear. The problem with the Osprey books is that they're expensive for their size, usually under a hundred pages each with a publisher's price of $15.95, which I think is outrageous for what is essentially a perfect-bound pamflet. The series has been around for over thirty years, I remember using them as reference for creating D&D campaigns in the 80s. I wish they'd lower the price, at least on the oldest titles, or create omnibus editions or boxed sets. I'd buy them up in a pinch. There are now over 400 titles in this series alone, and Osprey publishes many other books on military history. (Leave it to the British, heehee...) | | Back to Top | | |
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