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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is the kind of book you wish were longer., August 4, 1998
By A Customer
Island of Ghosts falls into what I call the Mary Renault School -- historical fiction that is so compellingly good that you end up believing this is how it actually happened. Gillian Bradshaw has taken a historical "footnote"--the arrival of Sarmatian cavalry in Britain--and turned it into a rousingly good story. I sat down and read this book in one afternoon, then re-read it the next day. Characters and their motivations are for the most part quite believable (although the villainess was just a tad extreme) and I found myself caring about what happened to them. This book is a great example of historical fiction, with just a little romance thrown in for good measure. I am quite a fan of the author's -- I have read all of her work -- and while I might not rate this as the best of her books, it's right up there near the top. If you read this book, you will not be disappointed -- I swear on fire.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A must-read for ancient history buffs, November 6, 1998
By A Customer
This book took me by surprise. I tend to like "girl" books--female protagonists, relationship issues, flowery prose, and so forth. The only reason I gave this book (which is about a Sarmatian soldier)a chance was because I am an ancient history buff, and I was looking for a bit of historical fiction. Well, I could not put this book down! I finished it in one day. Now, I am on Amazon ordering all of Gillian Bradshaw's other books. What really sold me about this book was the attention to detail. I mean, it's about a soldier, but he has been sent to Britain to serve under the Romans. He is constantly negotiating between his own Sarmatian customs (trying to preserve them) and the customs of both Rome and the indigenous British. Everything from food to armor to sleep habits becomes an issue. The book opens with the water-fearing Sarmatians(your soul is lost if you die by drowning)camped at the English Channel. They've never seen such a wide expanse of water, and they believe they are at the end of the world. The Romans intend to ferry them across to the island of Britain, but the Sarmatians fear that there is no island and that the Romans are looking to get them on the boats and drown them. It's really good stuff. You also have a wonderful cross-section of British Roman society--the Christian slave, the evil druid princess, the world-weary Roman centurion. This book is a must-read for ancient history buffs.
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
It's HISTORICAL fiction, not historical FICTION!, October 8, 1998
By A Customer
When Samartian cavalry, as the result of a political deal, were assigned to duty in 2nd century Roman Britain, hatreds and cultural conflicts reached the boiling point between the Samartians and the Romans, among the Samartians leaders and also involved all of them with long-simmering conflicts among the island's native residents. It's a political story from Roman times with overtones touching on what happens nowadays in Northern Ireland, in Israel and in the Balkans. That's why there is more "history" than "fiction" to this piece of "historical fiction." It's well worth reading for those who like a good yarn as well as digesting some food for thought about how things remain the same, even though eighteen centuries have passed. Since reading Ms. Bradshaw's book, I have read her "Tower at Alexandria" and "The Bearkeeper's Daughter." Both are in the same Roman setting, but oddly enough relate what happened then to today's feminism. There is nothing new under the sun.
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