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Enchanted Fire [Paperback]

Roberta Gellis (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

December 1, 1996
Seducing both gods and mortals with his musical gifts, Orpheus is overcome by the bewitching Eurydice, a feared sorceress who is seeking sanctuary in Argo from a powerful enemy. Original.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 448 pages
  • Publisher: Pinnacle (December 1, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0786003308
  • ISBN-13: 978-0786003303
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.2 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,725,071 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Roberta Gellis has a varied educational background--a master's degree in biochemistry and another in medieval literature--and working history--10 years as a research chemist, many years as a free-lance editor of scientific manuscripts, and more than 40 years as a writer. She is married--to the same man for over 60 years (no mean feat in these days) and lives in Lafayette, Indiana, with her husband Charles and a lively Scottish terrier called Zoe. She has one child, Mark, who teaches Rhetoric (a fancy name for expository writing) at Kettering University in Michigan. Mark is married to Sandra and they have a lovely daughter, Elizabeth.

Gellis has been a successful writer of historical fiction, publishing over 25 meticulously researched historical novels since 1964. The best known of these are The Roselynde Chronicles (ROSELYNDE, ALINOR, JOANNA, GILLIANE, RHIANNON, and SYBELLE). The series has been reprinted many times since its first appearance in 1979, most recently in 2006. Gellis has also been the recipient of many awards, including the Silver and Gold Medal Porgy for historical novels from West Coast Review of Books, the Golden Certificate and Golden Pen from Affaire de Coeur, The Romantic Times Award for Best Novel in the Medieval Period (more than once) and Lifetime Achievement Award for Historical Fantasy, as well as Romance Writers of America's Lifetime Acheivement Award.

More recently Gellis has ventured into other genres, starting with mythological fantasy (DAZZLING BRIGHTNESS, SHIMMERING SPLENDOR, ENCHANTED FIRE, BULL GOD, and THRICE BOUND). Most recently she has written historical fantasy, with a series of book coauthored by Mercedes Lackey set in Elizabethan times (THIS SCEPTER'D ISLE, ILL MET BY MOONLIGHT, BY SLANDEROUS TONGUES, and AND LESS THAN KIND). Before that she was writing historical mysteries, a four-book series set in London and Oxford in 1139 (A MORTAL BANE, A PERSONAL DEVIL, BONE OF CONTENTION and CHAINS OF FOLLY) and one set in the Italian Renaissance in Ferrara (LUCREZIA BORGIA and the MOTHER OF POISONS).

Since Gellis is one of the early addicts to electronic readers---she purchased a RocketeBook way back in 1999---it is no surprise that she was eager to get her own out of print historical romances into electronic format. Cerridwen Press (http://www.cerridwenpress.com) has published the Heiress Series (THE ENGLISH HEIRESS, THE CORNISH HEIRESS, THE KENT HEIRESS, FORTUNE'S BRIDE, and A WOMAN'S ESTATE) as well as the Royal Dynasty Series (don't ask me about that, there isn't a royal or a dynasty in any of the four books---it was a notion of a long-ago agent) SIREN SONG, WINTER SONG, FIRE SONG, and A SILVER MIRROR. Cerridwen offers a variety of formats, one of which can be read by the Kindle and for those too firmly addicted to paper, the books are also available in a very nice Trade edition (but those are rather expensive).

I'm sorry I don't have any amusing anecdotes to relate, as recommended by the Profile, but a writer's life is really very quiet. Sometimes my neighbors ask my husband what has happened to me because they haven't seen me in such a long time. Depending on his humor of the moment, sometimes Charles tells them that I can't come outside because he keeps me chained to my computer---but that isn't true. He lets me get up once in a while.

Roberta Gellis

 

Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good story, well told, April 1, 1998
By 
florkow (Vienna, Austria) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Enchanted Fire (Paperback)
Roberta Gellis is special. She writes good, exciting stories about intelligent, likeable characters and she is always original, you will never read a Gellis book and feel that it is run of the mill, everyday stuff. She stands out. She is one of my favorite authors.

Also, her Greek mythology series is very good, her idea of magic power fits well with the mythology we were taught and still makes it all fresh and exciting.

However, this is the weakest of the three she has written so far (Dazzling Splendour and Shimmering Brightness are the others). The central theme is the role of women and Orpheus just cannot accept that Euridyce is not a meek Greek female (you know,seen and not heard). After describing this conflict for a whole book, I find it a bit too easy to have Orpheus change his mind in just a few pages at the end. I would have needed some more explanation or some more time to see that his change of heart lasts. The ending left me feeling that she just had to wrap this up and finish. It is still a very good book, but the rushed ending leaves me with a slight disappointment.

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Orpheus and Eurydice, January 24, 2003
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Enchanted Fire (Paperback)
This is a fantasy retelling of the story of Orpheus and Eurydice, and the third in Roberta Gellis' mythology series. In Gellis' ancient world the Gods of Olympus are powerful mages. There are also lesser magicians who have an innate psychic power. They are referred to as Gifted. These individuals are often either dedicated to the gods where they live protected in their temples, or they move freely among the populace often hiding their Gifts for fear of being accused of witchcraft and killed. Greece is a particularly bad place for the Gifted.

Eurydice is a Thracian. In her case she had early been identified and taught in the temple, but she left a certain degree of wanderlust and left the temple to travel. When the story begins she had just escaped from servitude to a magician by draining his power from him. She is hiding on a nearly uninhabited spit of land when the boat, the Argo, beaches there.

The Argo is manned by a group of heroes who have sworn to aid their captain, Jason, in reaching the land of Colchis and retreiving the fleece of a magical ram. Among these heroes is Orpheus, a Gifted musician whose enchants those who hear it. Orpheus sponsors Eurydice who convinces Jason to take her with them because she knows the location of someone who can tell Jason how to reach Colchis.

Orpheus is both drawn to Eurydice, and repulsed by the fact that she has been raised in a society where women are given more freedom than in his village in Greece.

While the adventures that they engage in are a lot of fun, especially for the reader who has some knowledge of the stories of Greek myths, there is a certain flatness to the story which is why it missed being 5 stars. I think it has to do with the fact that one of Gellis' strengths in her Medieval stories is that she has a such a definite idea about what the period was physically like. She knows about who would sit in a stool and who would sit in the probably one chair available and why. While she seems have done a lot of research about bronze age Greece, there is just less known about the social and domestic habits of the period so it feels less concrete.

All in all though, still a better than average story with a strong romantic subplot.

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