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Paperback The Eagle and the Raven: Volume 9 Book

ISBN: 155652708X

ISBN13: 9781556527081

The Eagle and the Raven: Volume 9

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Spanning three generations, this historical novel tells the tale of Boudicca, the most famous warrior of ancient Britain, and Caradoc, the son of a Celtic king, who sets out to unite the people of the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Really should be printed again, great book

It was a small island on the edge of the most massive empire the world would ever see. Coated with mist and covered with the magic of the druids. The many tribes fought constantly, and a mans honor was valued by the strength of his sword. Even woman were honored by the blood they had spilled in Battle. Then Rome turned its eye towards them. They never stood a chance. This is the a story of three people, brave, devoted and strong who fought for a cause they knew was hopeless from the start. They gave all they had, gambled all they knew and dedicated their whole lives to a simple ideal: freedom. This is beautifully written, even moving at times. Pauline Gedge is a wonderful writer, and this should be published again. If you like this also read The Light Bearer by Donna Gillespie. Five stars.

Print it again!

This is an amazing novel. It is not, as the cover claims, so much about Boudicca -- though certainly plays her part in blazing fire and glory -- as it is another historical Bristish chieftan named Caradoc, who united many of the Celtic tribes of England against Rome and fought determinedly until his eventual defeat in A.D. 50. (For those of you who do not know the story -- it's not a common one -- I won't reveal the rest.) It is also about some of the (also historical) Romans who encountered the power of Britannia, though the ultimate sympathy (wrong word, but close) lies with the British tribes. Ms. Gedge sticks to history as far as she can in her writing, and fleshes it out with incredible skill. The book is 827 pages long and I devoured it.One of the things that makes this book so good is its chosen subject -- obscure figures who have become the stuff of legend; a mysterious and ancient fight for freedom that yet finds a home in our modern souls. Another is its realism -- brutal violence and desperate betrayal alongside deepest loveand noble ideals held, compromised, lifted up. This story does not shrink from death and wrenching sorrow, nor does it invent a hundred miraculous escapes, nor become so caught up in mysticism that it leaves no room for the ordinary man and woman. It is a tale of real people, intermingling and forging lives in less than ideal circumstances, yet time and again forced onto two opposing sides of an issue that has many more facets than two. It is a terribly sad story, but also a triumphant one, and one to stir your blood as others cannot. It deserves many more than five stars. Print it again!

Epic... ...compelling reading.

I first read this book many years ago as a teenager, and remembered it as being the best book that I had read to that time. A long time has passed, and many, many books later, it remains at the top of the list. I re-read it recently and once again it transported me into GEDGE'S world of Roman conquest, jealousy, greed, ambition, and a people's doomed fight for freedom.This book is complete, it has it all.RECOMMENDED!!I'd write more, but I'm not eloquent enough to put into writing fully the praise this book deserves.
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