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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
beautiful book, sheds light on a little-known era of history, October 19, 2001
This book by Joan Wolf is part of a trilogy on the making of Britain, starting with King Arthur and Morgan in The Road to Avalon, this one, Born of the Sun, and ending with Alfred the Great in The Edge of Light. Born of the Sun is about the clash between the Celts and the Saxons in the 6th century. Although it is less based on outside sources than the other two (just the the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle instead of legends or historical records), it is a powerful, moving novel about what might-have-been, and indeed probably was. The main characters, the Saxon Ceawlin of Wessex and his Celtic wife Niniane, have a beautiful love story, set against the turmoil of the times. Ceawlin did exist, and, as Wolf says in her afterword, was one of the few kings in the AS Chronicle upon which the Saxon title of Bretwalda, or "ruler of Britain" was bestowed. BUT, don't read this book for the history. Read it for the writing, as always superb - Joan Wolf is in top form. Do yourself a favor and buy this book today!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
(3.5 stars) too much war!, September 17, 2006
As the sequel to the best seller "The Road to Avalon" I can only imagine that with the novel "Born of the Sun" Joan Wolf hoped to firmly establish this trilogy as a view of the great Dark Age's political minds of England. That makes this book sound boring, but please don't forget that it is a romance novel.
As the author admits in her postscript the characters in this book are largely fictional-although the expansion of the Saxon kingdom of Wessex probably did go as happened in the novel, and the final merge of the British people with the Saxons did occur around this time. So the two characters in this book, Ceawlin, a [..]Saxon prince who will be king, and his bride, Niniane, a Celtic princess, didn't really exists. This is sad because this book has one of a hell of a love story about them. In that aspect the book is great, romantic, sweet and exciting.
But the book is also largely about war, and so it seems almost every 50 pages someone new was attacking the lovers, or they were at war, or they had been kidnapped, or just something was happening. It got very tiresome after a while. There was also an unresolved, unrequited love triangle thingy going on that just distracted from the main story, and I think, affected the character in a way that was unrealistic.
So, while this book is ok, even compelling at times, largely it did not meet up to the expectations that reading "The Road to Avalon" gave me. This one is good, but not great.
3.5 stars.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Simply wonderful!, June 22, 2002
I loved this book! The characters were real and raw, the plot moved smoothly, and the elegance of the writing made the love story even more touching. I felt like I was transported into the story, and I never wanted to put the book down! I highly recommend this novel -- this is some of Wolf's best work. I cried more than once!
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