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The Writer's Guide to Everyday Life in the Middle Ages (Writer's Guide to Everyday Life Series)

The Writer's Guide to Everyday Life in the Middle Ages (Writer's Guide to Everyday Life Series)

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Concise primer
Review: I agree with another reviewer here who says this book is good for a concise reference on the Medieval ages. This book is meant as a writer's reference and therefore is not designed to go as far into detail as say a college text book.

I'm a writer of a dark fantasy series based in a feudal society and I've found this book not only invaluably helpful but also extremely easy to handle. Let's face it, there are just times we writers want a quick fact about etiquette, dress, etc and not an entire lecture. That's when I pick up this book, page to the correct section, and 9/10 times will instantly find what I'm looking for. It sure beats scanning mountains of academic text to find a simple fact or two.

I also like how the authors list short bibliographies at the end of each chapter for authors who'd like more indepth material to research. The vocabulary lists are my favorite. I actually have each marked with tabs now for instant access.

This really is the perfect starter (primer) for those just beginning or considering the possiblities of a series set in a Medieval society. Highly recommended.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good as a concise reference
Review: I got a copy of this book because I was looking for a concise reference on the middle ages for fiction writing, primarily as a source of names and terminology. For this purpose, the book satisfied my needs. I found the vocabulary lists throughout the book particularly helpful. I don't have the expertise to comment as to whether the book is any good as a historical reference.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Stop scavanging for errors, everyone...
Review: I think that this book is extremely useful, especially the chapter about food, as it tells you things that is almost impossible to find elsewhere - such as a brief list of what they ate, what they did, when they ate, who served what, how they were seated, etc etc etc.

I've been hearing all this trashing about how horrible the pictures were, but I don't think they're nearly as bad as everyone keeps making them out to be. So what, a person left his glasses on - they weren't depicting a full-size model of someone from the middle ages, he was only modelling certain features. And also, below the picture of the Viking it says "the model wears a Viking CEREMONIAL horned helm with ear flaps." It never stated that that was the everyday helmet of a viking, if anybody bothered to read what was underneath. The robes of the two monks in the picture looked different to me, and it says "the man on the left wears a Benedictine robe; the man on the right wears a Franciscan robe."

Everybody here is looking for a textbook for school, as opposed to a guide book. She even says so in the Introduction - "this book is designed as a mere starting point or as a reference to look up much needed information as quickly as possible."

I think this book is a terrific guide and can't honestly see what all the fumes and steam are about. Some of the vocabulary words and definitions are utterly useless for me, but then most of them are gold. I'm not a professor of Middle Ages, so obviously I'm not picking up the grittiest mistakes, but that doesn't matter - I'm a fantasy writer, I don't need to know the specifics, and after being one of those people who went to the Library to look for information.... half of the books were crap meant for someone who had five years to read and understand a 900-page manual on FOOD that only talked about how they had no information and could not get any information on the food.

And frankly, if you're a fantasy writer, you don't need to get into the nitty-gritty stuff. I really don't care if the peasant-garb existed or not (and yes, it did, because I used to go on the internet on all sorts of sites on the middle ages, and for every typical female peasant garb it looked remarkably like the one in the book.)

This book has to be the clearest and quickest way to get information on the middle ages, and it gives you all the information you need to write an entire scene on something in detail and clarity, without blurring the background and hoping everyone won't notice the lack of detail and knowledge. You all can trash this book or toss it in the flames, but it's going to stay with me for a looooong time.


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