9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A beautifully written, and powerfully emotive story..., June 9, 2004
This is the first book in the Boudica series and sets the scene in pre-Roman invasion Britain, introducing readers to life in the tribes - a life which is beset by the dangers of tribal politics and resulting warfare, but is also beautiful in its simplicity. Life seems idyllic, and Manda carves an impression of what life may have been like prior to the Roman invasion - her descriptions of a simple and basic life giving respect to all living things and living by a good moral code bind the reader to the characters - each of whom are brought to life with wonderful vigour, and a sound sense of individuality.
Life changes and becomes more complicated as the shadow of Rome looms, threatening to change the face of Britain forever...
This book is wonderfully written - beautifully descriptive in a way which guides your imagination and allows it to grow with the characters and events... At times I found my heart beating and the pages turning faster. Manda is able to create an intensity in such simple things as the board game scene - a game played between a sharp witted child and his hated nemesis, with the stakes being very high - I would never have thought that reading about two people playing a board game would raise such tension, however it is wonderfully written, and the interplay between the characters such that I was unreachable to the outside world throughout!
The final scenes are more than one could expect from such a fine book and leave you feeling both exhausted and excited about the forthcoming volume in this series...
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Subtle Simplicity, Powerful Storytelling, March 9, 2006
I discovered these only about a week ago, and have been totally enslaved! This is masterful writing, and she must be channeling Druid ancestors, because she brings ancient times and peoples to life.
I don't think I've ever seen an author who's so brilliant at structuring a plot, and at knowing just when to reveal information, so that when you need to know something, it's already there. The reader feels events deeply, and understands their significance as if you, too, had been raised among the Eceni.
I was given book three, and began with it, not knowing there were two that came before. I soon discovered the others, so *stopped* reading the third. What I'd already learned had shed light on the earlier story, and gave me a greater appreciation of the story's structure, the mastery of the teller.
This is powerful storytelling, deceptively simple, well-crafted, utterly masterful. Through it all you get a feeling of destiny, as if the gods of the Eceni have planned everything, even the things that seem like disasters, even things as trivial as the color of someone's hair, to weave a master-tapestry and achieve their ends. Those caught up in the weaving of the goddesses and gods may believe that all is at an end, but the pattern is larger than any One can see.
If you have any interest at all in Druids, Celts, ancients, Romans... just about anything, do not miss these books
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I plowed through all three currently in print., March 7, 2006
What a bunch of page turners! Each was a good as the others. I thoroughly enjoyed all and I am looking forward eagerly to the fourth "Dreaming the Serpent Spear". Great books, I don't remember when I've been so absorbed. Frankly, I envy anyone who hasn't read them, they have tremendous treat waiting between the covers of those books.
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