From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good book -- depressing as hell!,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Gods Are Thirsty: A Novel of the French Revolution (Hardcover)
Tanith Lee's obsession with the French Revolution has given us one of those most lucid novels since Tale of Two Cities, and as Lee's book concerns the participants, I would dare say that it is the better of the two.The novel begins shortly before the French Revolution. The nobles have the power, the poor and starving and there's plenty of freefloating oppression to go around. Through the eyes of the narrator we see the revolution take form and topple an entrenched monarchy and even though we know what is going to come next, Lee's prose makes these scenes exhilarating. As the book shifts into the days of the Terror, the exhilaration turns to repulsion as the calls for mass execution are heeded and Robespierre seemlessly transforms himself from an idealistic senator into a mass executioner, all for the sake of the revoultion.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
the highest standard of historical fiction,
By Anonymous (NYC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Gods Are Thirsty: A Novel of the French Revolution (Hardcover)
Tanith Lee is one of my favorite writers. This book is a big departure for her, and I get the impression writing it was a dream of hers. It is top-rate historical fiction. It starts out a bit slow, but after it got me, I couldn't put it down. I wanted more after I finished it. I can't wait to check out all the facts with a non-fiction history. Lee creates colorful, fleshed-out, human characters out of figures that have become mere historical stick figures.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Atypical,
By "teencynic" (Nicosia, Cyprus) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Gods Are Thirsty: A Novel of the French Revolution (Hardcover)
If you're looking for a typical Tanith Lee (if there is such a thing, knowing Tanith) book, this will come as a surprise. For not only is this out of the sci-fi range, but also hideously long. It is, however, an enthralling read. Told in fragments, songs and doggerels, alternating between the first and third person (which some may find confusing), accounts, she tells of the French revolution, from the idea, the catalyst and the overwhelming bloodtide that inevitably followed a flawed idealism. It's deftly and passionately written -an evident labour of love, but at times so convulous (spelling?) it leaves one head-scratching over her meaning. Still, whether an old fan or just someone in search of a good read, give it a try -you may be surprised.
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