Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Tales from the Decameron
Tales from the Decameron | Giovanni Boccaccio
8 posts | 1 read | 1 to read
Bawdy and moving, hilarious and reflective - these stories offer the very best of Boccaccio's Decameron in a brilliant, playful new translation. This hugely enjoyable volume collects the best stories of Boccaccio's masterwork in a fresh, accessible new translation by Peter Hainsworth. It includes such celebrated, thought-provoking tales as 'Isabella and the Pot of Basil' (famously adapted by Keats) and 'Patient Griselda' alongside many boisterous and daring stories featuring faithless wives, philandering priests and curious nuns.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
blurb
Lcsmcat
Tales from the Decameron | Giovanni Boccaccio
post image

1. Tagged. This is the perfect time to read these stories.
2. Not really. I‘ll ask what someone is reading to start a conversation, but get most of my recommendations by reading reviews.
#two4Tuesday
Thanks for the tag @TheSpineView and @Ruthiella
Anyone who wants to play, consider yourself tagged.

TheSpineView Thanks for playing! 🌞📚😊 4y
Ruthiella I‘ve not read it but I agree the Decameron is PARTICULARLY apt right now! So I am going to actually ask you for a recommendation. I had a old (1960s maybe) copy of the book that I gave away because the translation was unwieldy. Do you have any particular translation of the Decameron that you would recommend? 4y
Lcsmcat @Ruthiella Mine is from the 1930s, so older than yours, but it‘s by Richard Adlington. It was pretty straight forward. 4y
35 likes3 comments
review
Lcsmcat
Tales from the Decameron | Giovanni Boccaccio
post image
Pickpick

These tales, written just after the first of the Black Death plague outbreaks, in the early 1350s, first translated into English in 1620, my translation was from 1930. With all those centuries and language differences, the main thing that comes through is how much alike we are. In some ways this could be considered “plague porn” because the pandemic changed so many of the rules of society, and much time is spent on amorous clergy 👇🏻

Lcsmcat 👆🏻 and adulterous relationships. But there is much humor - even if not all of the political references are obvious to a 21st century person. There is humor in the tales. But my favorite bits were the glimpses into life after / during the Black Death. (edited) 4y
Texreader Fantastic review 4y
Lcsmcat @Texreader Thanks! 4y
49 likes3 comments
blurb
Lcsmcat
Tales from the Decameron | Giovanni Boccaccio
post image

1. Hot and humid
2. RV or cabin (probably cabin these days!)
3. Pampinea from the tagged book. She‘s a 14th century bad-ass who survives the plague
4. Get up before my husband and read in the early morning quiet.
@4thhouseontheleft @howjessreads #friyayintro

alisiakae A character that survives the plague is always good! 😁 4y
26 likes1 comment
blurb
Lcsmcat
Tales from the Decameron | Giovanni Boccaccio
post image

1. Not a hobby, but petting my cat des tresses me.
2. Our governor made mask wearing mandatory.
Want to play @Graciouswarriorprincess @4thhouseontheleft @barbwire @megnews ?
#thankfulThursday @Cosmos_Moon

i.besteph Having a pet is a wonderful way to destress.😁💖 4y
Cosmos_Moon_River I agree! I love giving love to my kitties 💚 4y
Crazeedi Definitely fur babies are destressers!! 4y
23 likes3 comments
blurb
Lcsmcat
Tales from the Decameron | Giovanni Boccaccio
post image

The bet on a lady‘s chastity, hiding in a trunk he had delivered to her bedroom, the mole on her left breast which convinces the non-cuckholded husband that he has been cheated on. Boccaccio wrote it in the 1300s, Shakespeare in the 1600s. Yet not only the broad plot, but the details match exactly. #readingconnections

blurb
Lcsmcat
Tales from the Decameron | Giovanni Boccaccio
post image

We just finished The Great Courses course on The Black Death. Filmed in 2016, before our current situation, the professor‘s description of people‘s and government‘s reactions mirrors current events. And she‘s funny. And she made me want to read the tagged book,and The Canterbury Tales. So, diving in. #plaguereads

35 likes1 stack add
blurb
Limonotte
Tales from the Decameron | Giovanni Boccaccio
post image

My concession to the virus has been the purchase of a paperback copy of Tales from the Decameron and a St. Sebastian medal. We comfort ourself with stories when everything falls the pieces. #Pandemic

blurb
Lcsmcat
Tales from the Decameron | Giovanni Boccaccio
post image

I love the feel and the #smell of old hardbound books. #litsyclassics @Sarah83

Kalalalatja Those are all really pretty! 6y
Cathythoughts Gorgeous books 6y
47 likes4 comments