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Hardcover A Long Desire Book

ISBN: 0030461618

ISBN13: 9780030461613

A Long Desire

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

"A Long Desire" is about man's constant yearnings throughout legend and history to attain the unattainable. Always grasping at the stars just out of reach, chasing the rainbow for that pot of gold,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

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Great book

I remember well the time when I first read "Son of a Morning Star" several years ago. I was about 10 and found it mesmerizing. You know the feeling when you absorb yourself into a book and suddenly find yourself in a daze, half in this world and half in that? I got that feeling reading "Son" and with only a few other books. I haven't felt that way about a book for many years now and had begun to think that it had something to do with youth, and I wouldn't experience that again. And for some reason I never bothered to read another book of Connell's.Until yesterday, when I started reading "A Long Desire." And I got that same feeling reading it as I did years earlier with SOTMS. Connell is a fine stylist."A Long Desire" is about man's constant yearnings throughout legend and history to attain the unattainable. Always grasping at the stars just out of reach, chasing the rainbow for that pot of gold, looking for that lost city that must be just over the next hill.Through several interconnected essays Connell writes about quests: the searches for Atlantis, Prester John, the Northwest Passage, El Dorado, Cibola; the Children's Crusade to liberate the Holy Land; Columbus's search for the Indies; the thirst for knowledge and experiments in alchemy.Most of the things they were searching for had a actual basis in reality: the Seven Cities of Cibola really did exist, but they were just a group of seven Southwest Indian villages with very little gold. And the men who found it went looking elsewhere for the Seven Cities. It is the dream men strive for. "It may be that treasure exists for the purpose of tantalizing us," Connell writes. "If so, how strange. Why should something we passionately desire be subtly withheld?"Strictly speaking, all the people described in Connell's book were failures. None of them really found what they were looking for, that long desire. However, dreams aren't entirely valueless, and history would be pretty dull reading if it was without the passion of "a long desire."
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