theLuckyDragon wrote:Shogun is a very good book.
Aztec by G. Jennings sounds interesting.
What are the others about? Could you give a very brief description, maybe only the time period?
Aztec is a fabulous book - if you can find it. Unfortunately, for some reason Jennings' books are mostly out of print (probably because he's dead and the legal issues haven't been worked out). However, I still see copies of Aztec in stores so it may still be in print. Make sure you buy the original (Aztec - no funny subtitles); there were a few sequels (Aztec Blood, Aztec Rage) that were written by ghostwriters based on notes that Jennings wrote before he died... but they are not quite as good. Jennings wrote several others (Raptor and Journeyer are the other good ones, with Journeyer being the best IMO) but Aztec was his most famous. Anyway, they're all quite long and very well written and well-researched. Jennings was well known for spending quite a long time actually living in the areas where his novels were set prior to putting pen to paper.
Anyway, as you requested, summaries:
The pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett. This novel (quite different from Follett's other novels) is about the construction of a fictitious cathedral in 12th century England set amongst the backdrop of the civil war between King Stephen and Empress Maud.
Aztec by Gary Jennings. This novel is about the fall of the Aztec empire at the hands of Cortez and the Spanish. First person, told from the perspective of a near-blind "Jaguar" warrior. Most of the novel takes place before the Spanish arrive.
The Journeyer by Gary Jennings. Actually, it looks like this book is back in print again! Wow, I had to go to all kinds of used-book stores to find it a few years ago. Definitely pick this up - it's about Marco Polo's expeditions to the orient (1st person again) and Kublai Khan. This book blew me away.
Raptor by Garry Jennings. Hell, I'll put this one in, too. Jennings is just too good to omit one of his best novels. This one is about the Gothic conquest of the Roman Empire, at the hands of the Ostrogoth Theodoric I, told from the perspective of (get this) a Gaelic hermaphrodite.
Shogunby James Clavell. All of Cavell's books are set in the orient and revolve around the fictitious Struan family of European (specifically, Scottish) traders. This was his first and tells of the arrival of the first Struans to Japan during the time of the Tokugawa shogunate - although Clavell uses the fictitious Toranaga shogunate instead for some reason. Anyway, despite some of these fictional name-changes, it's still a great book.
Tai-Pan by James Clavell. Clavell's other great book (IMO), Tai-Pan is about Hong-Kong just after the British acquired it from the Chinese empire. Some people swear by the third book, Noble House, but I found this one to be far better - and shorter.
The Far Pavillions by M. M. Kaye. About India in the 19th century during British occupation. Starts around the 1857 Sepoy mutiny and ends (if I recall correctly) with the Battle of Kandahar in 1880. It bogs down a bit in the middle, but the last third about the Anglo-Afghan wars were very thrilling.
Sarum by Edward Rutherford. This is the only one of Rutherford's books I've read (though I've bought them all), and pretty recently at that, but it was very well done. Sort of in the style of Michener, the story is told in vignettes during different time-periods in the history of Salisbury, England. The first chapter takes place during the last ice age and the last chapter takes place in 1985.
Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurty. A tale of the old west. Won the Pulitzer Prize.
From Sea to Shining Sea by James Alexander Thom. Chronicles the Clark family from the American Indian War through the Louis and Clark Expedition.
I, Claudius by Robert Graves (also the sequel, Claudius the God). Fictional autobiography of the roman Emperor Claudius.
"What men are poets who can speak of Jupiter if he were like a man, but if he is an immense spinning sphere of methane and ammonia must be silent?" - Richard P. Feynman