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Elizabeth MacDonald

Auteur de Mike's Kite

21+ oeuvres 238 utilisateurs 4 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Elizabeth MacDonald is an editor and on-air personality at the FOX Business Network. She has covered business news for more than two decades, including at the Wall Street Journal and as an editor at Forbes Magazine, where she created The World's 100 Most Powerful Women annual ranking. MacDonald has afficher plus spent time working with Mother Teresa's community in Calcutta and New York City, volunteering at an AIDS clinic and shelters, and has engaged in other ministries of outreach in the New York metropolitan area. afficher moins

Œuvres de Elizabeth MacDonald

Mike's Kite (1990) 51 exemplaires
The Wolf is Coming! (1997) 49 exemplaires
Dilly-dally and the Nine Secrets (1999) 26 exemplaires
Mr. Macgregor's Breakfast Egg (1990) 19 exemplaires
John's Picture (1990) 14 exemplaires
A Matter of Interpretation (2019) 10 exemplaires
The Very Windy Day (1991) 8 exemplaires
Mr. Badger's Birthday Pie (1988) 6 exemplaires
Miss Poppy and Honey (1989) 4 exemplaires
Urban waterfront promenades (2017) 4 exemplaires
The two sisters (1975) 2 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

The Oxford Handbook of Urban Planning (Oxford Handbooks) (2011) — Contributeur — 13 exemplaires

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Canon Michael Scot has left his troubled childhood behind and become firstly a cleric and secondly a scholar. His prowess in Paris leads to him being sent as tutor to the future Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick. As Ferederick gains his majority he encourages Scot to work on the translations he is passionate about leading Scot to travel to Al Andalus and encounter the Moors and the Jews of Spain. As Frederick becomes more powerful his freedom is restricted by the Church and when the Church bans the works of Aristotle Scot and the Emperor are reunited.
I found this rather a confusing book. One one hand it is an interesting true story about a Canon who travelled across Europe translating great works from Arabic to Latin. It is also more tangentially about the politics of Church and State in Medieval times. However the slightly mystic twist in the latter part of the book threw me and I actually began to think that this was complete fiction. It's not a bad book by any means, I just couldn't wrap by reading head around certain plot lines.
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Signalé
pluckedhighbrow | 1 autre critique | Nov 23, 2019 |
For more reviews and bookish posts please visit: http://www.ManOfLaBook.com

A Matter of Interpretation by Elizabeth Mac Donald is a historical fiction book, taking place in the 13th Century following Michael Scot, a scholar and translator working for Emperor Frederick II. This is Ms. Mac Donald’s, an Irish born author, first book.

Michael Scot, scholar, mathematician, translator, and a priest, has been asked by Emperor Frederick II to translate the works of Aristotle, and on the way discovering the writings of Avicenna and Averroes . Scot travels from Italy to Spain risking life and limb to do so.

The Pope, however, seems to think that the translations are heresy, but Scot, with the backing of the Emperor, refuses to stop.

As a self-proclaimed history nerd, I usually enjoy historical fiction very much. One can learn much from a well written, mostly accurate, historical fiction and A Matter of Interpretation by Elizabeth Mac Donald is no exception.

I’ve heard of Michael Scot in passing, but didn’t know much about him. I never realized he was as well-known as he was among intellectual circles of his lifetime. I mostly heard of Scot (The Scot) from fictional work such was Dante’s Divine Comedy where he is in the Eighth Circle of Hell with other false profits. According to his Wikipedia page, there were many not-so-kind legends about The Scot, in which magic, witches and spirits all play some part.

I was impressed by the research the author has done, rich historical details lend authenticity to the story, even when the paranormal is provoked (not very often, but just right). The narrative remains plausible and the characters seem true to their historical counterparts. The characters are fleshed out, complex people struggling with events, outside pressure, and themselves.

I was wondering about the language the author chose to use, instead of using old grammar which would either make it difficult to read or simply historically inaccurate (especially since the novel has multiple languages being spoken, none of them English), the author chose to use contemporary language and prose. This works because, told from the point of view of The Scot, the language provides familiarity, candor, openness, and honesty to the story and characters.

This novel shows The Scot attempting to reconcile heresy with knowledge, myth and truth, while keeping a balance trying to navigate the needs of Honorius III, who puts the church fist vs. the court of Frederick II, who puts the Empire first. The author manages to capture a time when Europe is turning a corner and the forces which want to hold it back, against the forces that want to charge forward.
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Signalé
ZoharLaor | 1 autre critique | Nov 12, 2019 |
A different take on a wolf story. Really stresses team work and doing for others. Give kindness, get kindness. Probably a 4th or 5th grade level.
 
Signalé
bzittlosen | 1 autre critique | Sep 14, 2014 |
This is an easy book. A family of rabbits is threatened by a wolf. They take cover with another family of hens, then pigs, then cows and finally, a donkey. All the animals together end up scaring off the wolf and they are able to live in peace. I think this book would be appropriate for 2nd to 4th graders, as there are many colorful verbs and adjectives.
 
Signalé
HannahRevard | 1 autre critique | Sep 5, 2013 |

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Œuvres
21
Aussi par
1
Membres
238
Popularité
#95,270
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
4
ISBN
55
Langues
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