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Books set in a particular country

In return i'll share the only Swiss title i recall (even thoug..."
Heidi is THE Swiss classic, but I didn't bring it into the conversation here as it has little to do with modern Switzerland. I think you'd appreciate the art-centered novel.

William Dalrymple, a longtime expat has a couple of terrific books of observations, City of Djinns: A Year in Delhi and The Age of Kali: Indian Travels & Encounters.
Novelist Rohinton Mistry has a few solid titles, but am throwing out Family Matters and Swimming Lessons and Other Stories from Firozsha Baag.
Following Fish: Travels Around the Indian Coast impressed me greatly, and I confess to being a bit jaded (shall we say) regarding my favorite genre of travel lit/essay/writing.





Signora Da Vinci

Set in 15th century mostly Florence, this is a story of Leonardo da Vinci’s mother. There is very little known about her and what is known is based on assumptions.
/review/show...

Signora Da Vinci

Set in 15th century mostly F..."
Nice review, Annette. I have a book on the Medici's that I've yet to tackle.


It's nonfiction. I have hundreds of books so I can't locate it right now. I do try to keep a list of the books I have. Unfortunately it is by author and I don't know who the author is. :(
I'll try to look though some of my shelves and see if I can locate it.


Thanks for the title and new to me author, John.
My library also has her other book, which also sound good. Katalin Street
From the author of The Door, selected as one of the New York Times "10 Best Books of 2015," this is a heart wrenching tale about a group of friends and lovers torn apart by the German occupation of Budapest during World War II.

Good book!

My library also has her other book, which also sound good. Katalin Street..."
She has a bunch of books, but I'm not sure how many are in english yet. I also read Iza's Ballad, but liked The Door better.

I really liked Magda Szabó's The Door, too. It gave some insight into customs from there, as well as difficult relationships. It's the sole book i've read by her, however.

..."
Thank you Madrano and thank you for the recommendation. I will check it out. Now, I have to run :)

Bought the Kindle edition of this essay collection (each is only a few pages) as something I could pick up and put down at random times when I needed something convenient for my phone; books with a continuous storyline don't work well for me that way.
I've read about 30 of the 35 pieces, finding only a couple of them failed to hold my interest. Overall, I've found them quite interesting. Taiwan strikes me as more culturally similar to Japan than mainland China. Looking forward to the "sequel" of this one Formosa Moon (which I purchased recently as part of a Kindle promotion).


Formosa Moon's cover pic I find unusually fascinating. Earlier in the thread I mentioned Michael Pronko's essay collections on Tokyo similarly effective in giving a sense of place.


Thanks for sharing the title with us, John.

No problem!
Finland ...
I'm going to recommend the (police procedural) mysteries of Kati Hiekkapelto, especially as her cop arrived as a teen as a Balkan refugee, so the pov is a bit of an" outsider" take on Finnish life.

Your recommendation reminded me of one i could make from Denmark. It's an oldie but i felt a real sense of the land and the Greenlanders who live in Copenhagen. Smilla's Sense of Snow by Peter Høeg really called to me. I also liked the film upon which it was based, although it wasn't as good by half as the book.

Your recom..."
The Hummingbird - here you go!


I loved that book. I recently lent it out to a few friends at my gym.

I loved that book. I..."
Whenever I think of this book though, I'm always haunted by those two young guys who died in the Congo.
Speaking of a haunting book, I liked this one set in post-war Vienna, for lack of a more modern Austrian title: The Crooked Maid.

..."
John, your post also reminded me that I lent this book out this past summer and have not gotten it back. Time to drop an email on my friend. :)

Also, for Israel I can recommend The Extra.

Poland: Swimming in the Dark
Italy: My House in Umbria
Wales: A Shadow On The Lens
Spain: All This I Will Give to You
Israel: Five Seasons

For nonfiction, i suspect nothing will top Charles C. Mann's groundbreaking 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus. It's a history book which covers North, Central and South American tribes just prior to Columbus's entry into the New World. I was surprised by how organized and efficient tribes were prior to their decimation by illnesses from Europe.
Piers Paul Read's book Alive: The Story of the Andes Survivors was set in SA but i don't recall much beyond the story of survival, so i barely considered it when i read your post. Worth considering, though.

Mario Vargas Llosa
Gabriel GarcÃa Márquez
Isabel Allende

This is great, thank you! I'll be checking these out.

Mario Vargas Llosa
Gabriel GarcÃa Márquez
Isabel Allende"
Excitingly, I just bought A Long Petal of the Sea by Isabel Allende - looking forward to reading that soon. Will check out the other authors, thank you!

France: The Jules Maigret police procedurals by Georges Simenon
Austria: The Max Lieberman series, by Frank Tallis
Phillipines: Smaller and Smaller Circles, by F. H. Batacan
India: The Far Pavilions, by MM Kaye
Denmark: Smilla's Sense of Snow by Peter Hoeg
Soviet Russia (historical): We the Living, by Ayn Rand
Soviet Russia (contemporary): Gorky Park, by Martin Cruz Smith
Japan: Shogun, James Clavell

I like that you included historical & contemporary looks at Russia. That's a good idea for any country's books. I'm glad you shared these titles.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Native Tourist: A Holiday Pilgrimage in Myanmar (other topics)Defiled on the Ayeyarwaddy: One Woman's Mid-Life Travel Adventures on Myanmar's Great River (other topics)
Winter in Sokcho (other topics)
Winter in Sokcho (other topics)
The Scorpion-Fish (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Ma Thanegi (other topics)Peter Høeg (other topics)
Gabriel GarcÃa Márquez (other topics)
Mario Vargas Llosa (other topics)
Isabel Allende (other topics)
More...
In return i'll share the only Swiss title i recall (even though part is spent in Germany)--Heidi by Johanna Spyri. It evoked what i thought Switzerland must be, although i don't know whether it is or is not. I've only spent one night there & we were surrounded by cows, not goats or sheep. And a cat jumped into our window during the night--no screens there!