Trying to decide between two anonymous sources, Bertrand de Bar-Sur-Aube, Luigi Pulci, Matteo Maria Boiardo, Ludovico Ariosto, or Lope de Vega. Which one of them do you think does the best job creating a fascinating story/setting for Charlemagne's Twelve Paladins?
*hears crickets*
OK, for those of you not familiar with the authors listed above, have you ever tried epic poetry to see some of the other sources for contemporary epic fantasies? There are some truly magical works out there, many of them free/cheap as e-books or in print editions. Am currently alternating between the authors mentioned above and 1-2 others for a mass reading/re-reading of available Roland/Orlando stories, as this character was a personal favorite before I ever read Tolkien or any 20th-21st century fantasy fiction.
*hears crickets*
OK, for those of you not familiar with the authors listed above, have you ever tried epic poetry to see some of the other sources for contemporary epic fantasies? There are some truly magical works out there, many of them free/cheap as e-books or in print editions. Am currently alternating between the authors mentioned above and 1-2 others for a mass reading/re-reading of available Roland/Orlando stories, as this character was a personal favorite before I ever read Tolkien or any 20th-21st century fantasy fiction.
Trying to decide which of these is the best shared-world writer...
23/12/2012 02:23:35 AM
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I have heard of the Bertrand fella, and the Twelve Paladins but I haven't read any of his works
23/12/2012 02:58:41 AM
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I do intend to read Orlando Furioso (and Gerusalemme Liberata) at some point.
23/12/2012 08:30:03 AM
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What does Gerusalemme Liberata have to do with it?
23/12/2012 02:49:41 PM
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Never had a formal lesson in Italian
23/12/2012 05:17:48 PM
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I actually believe Italian to be the easiest Romance language
23/12/2012 07:26:43 PM
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It certainly isn't the hardest (Romanian and then French might be that)
23/12/2012 07:42:38 PM
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Romanian always seemed quite easy to me
24/12/2012 02:08:17 AM
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I think we're interpreting this a bit differently here
24/12/2012 04:15:46 AM
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So by "purity" you really mean the simplicity and limitation on vowel sounds...
26/12/2012 01:20:40 AM
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Yes, although I prefer it being in reference to a lesser range of variation in vowel sound to letter
26/12/2012 04:33:06 AM
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Eh, they're both famous Italian epics?
25/12/2012 07:06:37 PM
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You make it sound as though Medieval Italian is radically different from Modern Italian.
26/12/2012 01:15:24 AM
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From the aesthetic point of view I think that Ariosto is recognized as the best.
23/12/2012 02:54:43 PM
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I agree (all but the Bar-Sur-Aube I've read in the original language, with translations to help)
23/12/2012 05:16:04 PM
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Since it's a short book I might just buy a paperback and hope Dumbarton Oaks issues a hardcover.
23/12/2012 07:29:52 PM
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It'll be a few months at least before I tackle Mommsen in any language
23/12/2012 07:44:42 PM
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I took a chance and ordered Orlando Furioso a week ago from amazon.it
24/12/2012 02:14:02 AM
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Hopefully it'll be what you want
24/12/2012 04:19:32 AM
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Io sono trasportato di gioia
28/12/2012 12:32:21 AM
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And I just ordered their Tasso.
28/12/2012 01:09:08 AM
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Very strange indeed
28/12/2012 04:46:26 AM
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Excellent!
28/12/2012 04:45:42 AM
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The books are not as rigid as a cardboard-style hardcover, but they aren't very supple.
28/12/2012 05:36:35 AM
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I agree about the Old French and Catalan - it makes sense when you think about it.
25/12/2012 07:18:35 PM
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Having finished re-reading the Pulci, I think that one might interest you as well
25/12/2012 08:59:38 AM
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Saw the title of this and immediately thought: Tite Kubo. haha *NM*
03/01/2013 10:27:22 PM
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Larry, you're so awesome. </Cartman> *NM*
13/01/2013 01:15:21 AM
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