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Language of Stones [Paperback]

Robert Carter (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 7, 2005
A rich and evocative tale set in a mythic 15th century Britain, to rival the work of Bernard Cornwell. The Realm is poised for war. Its weak king -- Hal, grandson of a usurper -- is dominated by his beautiful wife and her lover. Against them stands Duke Richard of Ebor and his allies. The two sides are set on a bloody collision course! Gwydion is watching over the Realm. He has walked the land since before the time of the druids, since before the Slavers came to subdue the people. Gwydion was here when Arthur rode to war: then they called him 'Merlyn'. But for his young apprentice, Willand, a fearsome lesson in the ways of men and power lies ahead. The Realm is an England that is still-magical. Legendary beasts still populate its by-ways. It is a land criss-crossed by lines of power upon which standing stones have been set as a secret protection against invasion. But the power of the array was broken by the Slavers who laid straight roads across the land and built walled cities of shattered stone. A thousand years have passed since then, and those roads and walls have fallen into decay. The dangerous stones are awakening, and their unruly influence is calling men to battle. Unless Gwydion and Will can unearth them, the Realm will be plunged into a disastrous civil war. But there are many enemies ranged against them: men, monsters and a sorcerer who is as powerful as Gwydion himself.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

'Full of charm and the magic of landscape ! an enjoyable read' Amazon 'A compelling tale that fully utilizes its beautifully crafted characters' Dreamwatch 'Carter's prose is smooth, and he has a real feel for the countryside. His plot keeps the pages turning' Starburst 'Just the right mix of magic, mystery and mud ! Images of terrifying supernatural forces are carefully wrought as Carter weaves his spell' Lads Mag

About the Author

Robert Carter was born exactly five hundred years after the first battle of the Wars of the Roses. He was brought up in the Midlands and later on the shores of the Irish Sea where his forebears hail from. He was variously educated in Britain, Australia and the United States, then worked for some years in the Middle East and remote parts of Africa. He travelled widely in the East, before joining the BBC in London in 1982. His interests have included astronomy, pole-arm fighting, canals, collecting armour, steam engines, composing music and enjoying the English countryside, and he has always maintained a keen interest in history. Today he lives in a 'village' that only sounds rural -- Shepherd's Bush.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 592 pages
  • Publisher: Harpercollins Pb; New Ed edition (February 7, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0007165048
  • ISBN-13: 978-0007165049
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.4 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.1 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,854,073 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Slow Start but Novel Ideas, September 8, 2011
By 
Sir Furboy (Aberystwyth, UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Language of Stones (Paperback)
The cover does not really give a good guide as to the content, which is essentially an alternative history tale set around the onset of the War of the Roses. But this alternate world is very different from ours. Magicians wander around, drawing power from magical stones and keeping other creatures at bay. Willand is taken into the care of a magician, Gwydion, who speaks magic mostly in Gaelic, but sometimes slips in a bit of Welsh.

Potentially this is a great story, but I found it extremely slow. It took hundreds of pages for the characters to develop, and indeed a good many pages just to start to unravel the setting. The book would maybe have done better to forget the links with real history and geography (which are tenuous), and stick to a full scale fantasy world.

A faster plot would also aid the book.

Nevertheless it was not terrible. Anyone enjoying alternative history may love this book. The writing was good, and the action - when it finally came - was intersting, with a good and reasonably complex plot.

All in all, not a book I would recommend - but some readers with different expectations could love it.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Sparkling read, September 1, 2005
This review is from: Language of Stones (Paperback)
Oh, I thoroughly enjoyed this. Spied it quite by chance whilst browsing through a shop the other day with its catchy cover, bought it, sat down and read in two sessions. Quite a remarkable first novel.

Robert Carter's The Language of Stones is set in an alternative fifteenth century England. One where a thirteen year old lad named Willard has his world rudely turned upside down on Beltine when a gandalf-esque character looms out of the darkness to claim his protege. This sorceror/warlock/wizard (Will is not sure what he is) goes by a multitude of names down the generations but is recognisable under more familiar pseudonyms as Jack O'Lantern or Merlyn , though know n throughout the novel Gwydion. The legend of King Arthur is reborn.

A forced march to the Wychwood dumps poor Will in the hands of Lord Strange with his boar's head for six months where the rebellious streak in the lad means he learns some mild naming magic and promptly nearly gets killed by a marsh hag whilst waiting for Willow, a girl of equal age that he has confused feelings for. Just in time Merlyn reappears to take Will with him as the land prepares for a coming war. A trip to meet King Hal and a last minute escape from the overly boorish Duke Edgar lands Will and Gwydion off the Irish coast whence they learn what they must do. Namely discover the battlestones that sit on the lorc lines. What follows is a coming of age for Will as he continues to prove his inheritance before ending up at Fotheringham castle under the guardianship of Duke Richard, pretender to the throne, training as a squire to the overly thuggish firstborn, Edward. Schroolroom fights and taunting later he finds himself grown to a young man, learning from the Wortmaster and struggling to deal with his feelings for Willow who has reappeared.

Gywdion returns and has fallen out of favour with the Duke after passing the exquisite diamond they found at Leir's tomb to Queen Mag. War is coming and he takes Will in a desperate attempt to locate the Doomstone, that evil-harbouring piece of granite that is driving the Realm towards War. After finding the lesser Plague stone and discovering more about his inner self Gwydion and Will find themselves at Badon Hill as Duke Richard prepares to assault the town harbouring King Hal, Duke Edgar and the Queen. A short nasty fight finds many prophecies fulfilled and Will has his own sorcerous battle at the heart of the Sightless Ones with the Doomstone cover of St Swythyn's tomb before returning to his own Shire will he enemies defeated but not vanquished.

What is sparkling about Carter is that here is clearly an author well versed in English and Celtic myth as he transcribes many names, places and myths into his own versions that are immediately recognisable to the knowledgeable reader. His finest effort is Gwydion's reference to Iuliu the Seer (or Julius Caesar to the historian) but the novel is littered with altered names and celtic mythology that seeks to demonstrate how easy it is to twist the facts by word of mouth. The lengthy author's note at the end goes into some detail about the parallels he draws with British geography and the times that preclude the Wars of the Roses. Carter is a fine author and the sequel to this opener is one novel I'll definitely be shelling out the extra for the hardback version as soon as it is out in May.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Journey Into Myth, February 22, 2006
By 
This review is from: Language of Stones (Paperback)
Like a modern-day Geoffrey de Monmouth, Robert Carter has crafted a detailed and thoroughly enjoyable re-imagining of British history. The myths, legends and artifacts of pre-Christian England are given new life through the story of Will, who must unravel his mysterious destiny and prevent the hidden powers of the Realm from inciting a terrible war. Elements of Mediaeval history and fantasy coalesce across a landscape that is both familiar and unfamiliar, and at times it's hard to say just where 'the real' ends and 'the unreal' begins. With a memorable cast of characters and an engaging story full of eldritch terrors and wonders, 'The Language of Stones' sits well alongside the works of J.R.R. Tolkien, Evangeline Walton and Ursula Le Guin. Excellent!
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