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Hardcover The Lute Player Book

ISBN: 9997412621

ISBN13: 9789997412621

The Lute Player

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

*Best Available: (missing dust jacket)

$8.49
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Book Overview

Legend has long told the story of Blondel the Lute Player who found the lost soldier-king Richard Coeur-de-Lion-kidnapped on the way back from the great crusade to the Holy Land. Blondel found his... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Lofts removes the mythology to reveal the 'real' Richard I

History has been truly kind to Richard the Lionheart. He's remembered as the great medieval king of England, a man of honor and bravery who led a crusade to free the Holy Land from the Saracens. He's a real hero revered for his justice and military skills...but when looking at his actual history one has to ask the question *why?* Yes, he was a great military leader. But this is a king who spent less than a year on the island he ruled, couldn't speak the native tongue of his people, and nearly bankrupted his people to finance his war and, after his capture by a rival potentate, to pay off his ransom. So why is this king so beloved? 'The Lute Player' succeeds in bringing this contradictory king to life through the eyes of three main narrators: Anna of Apieta, the crippled half-sister of Richard's wife; Eleanor of Aquitaine, Richard's mother; and Blondel, a court musician who begins his service with Anna but later accompanies Richard on his travels in the Holy Land. Each narrator brings his or her own biases to their vision of Richard. Anna meets Richard when he comes to joust at the court of her father, the King of Navarre, and her sister Berengaria falls madly in love with him. Although he is engaged to another woman, Richard eventually marries Berengaria. It soon becomes clear, however, that he did so only to get her dowry to finance the crusade to re-take Jerusalem, Richard's true passion. When he leaves, Berengaria sends her musician Blondel with Richard to keep him safe and keep her apprised of his condition. Blondel, desperately in love with Berengaria, does as his mistress commands and chronicles their adventures in the Holy Land. Any romantic notions about the glory of the Crusades are removed by the accounts of disease and depravation that wear down the army far more effectively than the Saracens, but even in the midst of suffering Richard maintains a determination and bravery that makes him seem worthy of his legendary status...until the cruel way he ignores his wife and his people resurfaces again. Ultimately Norah Lofts shows Richard for the flawed and egotistical man that he was, but she doesn't vilify him. Her deep exploration into his character makes the novel seem quite modern, even though it was originally published in 1951. At one point she suggests that Richard's coldness to Berengaria may have been because he was homosexual. For a good, proper Englishwoman writing in the 1940s, I honestly would not have expected that particular twist in the book. But from what little evidence we have from his life, it's certainly a plausible explanation for some of his behavior. Thoroughly engrossing, 'The Lute Player' had me completely absorbed from the first few pages. There's a focus on the Big Plot of the Crusade of Richard the Lionheart, and he's still the star of the show. But it's all the little day-to-day conversations and relationships between the `minor' characters like Anna and Blondel and Berengaria - the ones

Good Book

This book is about Richard I the Lionheart. Its main characters are his Lute Player Blondel, his mother Eleanor of Aquitaine, his wife and her sister. This work of fiction carefully follows the thread of history, explaining actions that Richard was criticized for, and filling in history's blanks. The book plays out during Richard's crusade. The historical information about the troubles faced and the experiences of soldiers on crusade were amazing. I thought that I respected those men before, but I had no idea. When the book ends you are left begging for more. It is a shame that she didn't write a part two.

The Lute Player

When I was a child my aunts and grandmothers loaned this book around in the family and everyone loved it. As an adult I found it, and a box full of other books by Norah Lofts, at a second hand book store. This book is brilliant, as are all of Norah Lofts' books; she is my favorite author. I am shocked at how many are out of print. Other great books: Jassy, Nethergate, Queens of England, Scent of Cloves, The Lost Queen,How Far To Bethleham...they are all great. Please put them back into print.

Enthralling look at the Crusades

This is the story of Richard the Lion-Hearted and the Third Crusade, but the miracle of it is that you see it not from Richard's viewpoint but from the viewpoint of a princess who loved him, her hunchbacked half-sister, and an ordinary lute player. Much of it is based on old legends and histories which makes it even more fascinating. Yet it is a tale which has a modern resonance because Richard, at least in this telling, was a homosexual.
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