When I selected
The Historian, I misinterpreted the book jacket. I was under the impression that it was a memoir of a women's discovery of her family roots. It is written in that tone and is chock-full of historical facts of ancient eastern Europe. She gives a very meaty history of Vlad the Impaler and some other nasty guys. However, it soon became apparent that things weren't what they seemed when Draculaesk things started to occur in the storyline.
So, here's the real deal. The young
heroine recounts her memoirs of travels with her father, a historian. The story begins in Amsterdam where the young heroine resides with her father. She the uncovers a message of foreboding plied between the pages of a strange book found in her father's library. The story proceeds to take the reader all across Europe with quality time spent in Turkey, Transylvania, France, and Budapest, as the heroine learns about her father's past and her ominous family tree.
This turned out to be a fresh new version on good old Dracula. If I'd have realized it was a Dracula story, I would never have read it. I'm glad I didn't know; There was so much history of 15th century Vladimer (who had an impact on all of the regions we'll be visiting), insights into the Hungarian psyche, and just great travel writing. Now I want to go to Turkey, too.
One interesting note on Hungary: They nod their heads up-and-down for no, and side-to-side for yes.
1 comment:
Great idea-- thanks. I would add Schindler's List, either the book or the movie as good prep for Krakov, where some of it was filmed, and of course, Auschwitz.
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