It was fun to do, but perhaps I'd have enjoyed the book more if I hadn't known anything about the historical reality - I'd certainly have had a less tainted view on the quality of the book, especially in terms of worldbuilding. I'd have to reread Tigana to see, but either that book is far less obvious in its connection to the real world, or I just missed the vast majority of the connections, which might be part of the reason why in my mind Tigana is still a masterpiece, and this book not so much.
I don't think Tigana is based on our world at all. Most of his books are, but that one not so much.
And I wonder if that's one of the reasons I don't really like it. I love the way Kay takes our real world - history or otherwise - and twists it. (The other reason I don't like Tigana is that I think the revenge theme is pushed too far and none of the characters are people I sympathise with.)
I knew that much beforehand, though I'm fairly sure I'd have realized it before too long, thanks to that Age of Kings campaign about him.
Never actually read the legend or the play or whatever.

Heh. I don't ever play the campaigns.

*MySmiley*
Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read. - Groucho Marx
Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read. - Groucho Marx
The Lions of Al-Rassan by Guy Gavriel Kay: the November/December Book Club
18/11/2010 09:33:45 AM
- 1635 Views
Prologue and Part One - the pieces are moved into place.
18/11/2010 09:37:08 AM
- 789 Views
I've read this before, more than once, but I can remember very little of what happens.
18/11/2010 12:58:44 PM
- 940 Views
Re: I've read this before, more than once, but I can remember very little of what happens.
20/12/2010 07:31:10 PM
- 794 Views
Part Two: Exile *NM*
18/11/2010 09:38:21 AM
- 442 Views
I still like it.
22/12/2010 09:27:09 AM
- 980 Views
Part Three
18/11/2010 09:40:26 AM
- 793 Views
Still no major objections
25/12/2010 04:07:43 PM
- 836 Views
Overall thoughts: did you like the book?
18/11/2010 09:41:54 AM
- 813 Views
The characters: Jehane, Ammar, Rodrigo
18/11/2010 09:45:51 AM
- 785 Views
A superficial point:
18/11/2010 08:33:58 PM
- 867 Views
Yes. Phèdre no Delaunay de Montrêve (as opposed to Racine's Phèdre).
18/11/2010 08:37:49 PM
- 703 Views
The technicalities: writing style, plotting, etc.
18/11/2010 09:48:48 AM
- 780 Views
He really does love his drama. (spoilers for late in the book)
18/11/2010 09:02:13 PM
- 886 Views
Re: He really does love his drama. (spoilers for late in the book)
21/11/2010 06:13:32 PM
- 770 Views
Re: He really does love his drama. (spoilers for late in the book)
29/12/2010 03:40:31 PM
- 793 Views
Re: He really does love his drama. (spoilers for late in the book)
29/12/2010 03:39:07 PM
- 877 Views
Because I was amusing myself with this during the read: on meanings of names and places
18/11/2010 03:38:39 PM
- 1285 Views
I wish I had the time and brainpower to do that when reading books.
18/11/2010 07:48:30 PM
- 789 Views
Actually, I'm not sure if it really enhanced the reading experience.
18/11/2010 08:11:29 PM
- 752 Views
Hm.
18/11/2010 08:15:32 PM
- 954 Views
Supposedly it's based on Italy? But yeah, maybe that's only superficial.
18/11/2010 08:25:54 PM
- 913 Views
A note on your Tigana comment..
18/11/2010 08:24:24 PM
- 822 Views
I did not catch all of those. Certainly not the arabic name-references.
29/12/2010 11:53:46 PM
- 948 Views
Us and Them: how can we do this to each other?
21/11/2010 06:07:46 PM
- 799 Views