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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Last English King: Bayeux re-woven in Words,
This review is from: The Last English King (Hardcover)
Author Julian Rathbone immediately introduces Walt, a likable character who will not only serve as guide through his 11th Century world but also acts as a participant in one of its most significant events - the Battle of Hastings. While this reader often finds books that ignore linear chronology in telling their story annoying, here the technique works quite well. We meet Walt, once guardsman to the late King Harold II shortly after the decisive battle. Injured, defeated, guiltridden, he trudges across Europe in search of either oblivion or expiation. The angst Walt carries around makes him accessible to a modern reader, but he is never made to seem either offensively anachronistic or unduly gloomy. In brief, but compelling narrative the author recreates the sensation of traveling through the countryside in what was still, effectively, the Dark Ages. When he reaches the outskirts of the Byzantine Empire and then Constantinople itself, Rathbone cleverly sums up the wonders of the city through Walt's literally stunned reaction to a religious service he witnesses in the Hagia Sofia. During the course of his journey, Walt encounters Quint, a quirky, nomadic character with an inquisitive nature. As he and Walt take to the road together, Quint begins to question his companion about his former life. It is in these discussions that the author sets up the social milieu in which the battle will ultimately take place. The two travelers are then, in effect, left "on the road" and Rathbone takes up the tale from the early years of Edward the Confessor's reign, focusing on his interactions with the powerful Godwin family as well as the King's relationships with his mother and his lover. This is as far as I've gotten, and while it may seem strange to write a review before actually finishing the book, I feel that it has been such a fascinating read up to this point that I can't imagine being disappointed by what will follow. The non-linear chronology allows Rathbone to simultaneously spin multiple strands of the story thus keeping interest high on many levels: the battle itself, the perils of 10th Century travel, the tensions between Norman and English, King Edward and the Godwins, Walt and Quint, Walt and Harold Godwin. The narrative is so rich, I could continue on in this strain. Anyone appreciating historical fiction that shows a strong respect for the facts on which it was based will thoroughly enjoy this book.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Enthralling and dramatic,
This review is from: The Last English King (Hardcover)
I bought this book at Stansted Airport hoping to pass a few otherwise boring hours of travel. I didn't realise how enthralled I was to become, not just in the plot but in the whole scene of pre-Norman England. Certainly Julian Rathbone's presentation brings the rather stilted characters depicted on the Bayeux Tapestry to life as flesh and blood. It has also aroused in me (an Englishman in exile living in Spain surrounded by Scots!) a definite patriotism as well as an interest to read further into the history of the period. (I romantically like to think of my own ancestors linking shields to protect the last truly English king). Certainly the parallelism with our own end of Millennium 'threat' from across the Channel was not lost on me. The wide (but not pretentiously used I think) vocabulary made this interesting as literature.On the minus side: The anachronisms (depsite the plea of the author in his foreword) do sometimes grate. And I think he possibly has some religious axe to grind.
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
eyewitness fictional account a la Pippin & Merry,
This review is from: The Last English King (Hardcover)
Imagine if Aragorn had fallen at the battle of Pelinor Fields, and one of his close companions had run away and finally given an account of his defeat, and you have some idea of how this book reads. Filled with cheerful anachronisms, "The Last English King" evokes "I, Claudius" but also "The Lord of the Rings". At the end both Excalibur and Durandil are mentioned. The fugitive survivor creeps across the forests and rivers of Europe till he fetches up on the quays of the Golden Horn. There at the capital of the last empire of the West he falls in with fellow travellers and recounts the tale of the defeat of Harold Godwinson at the Battle of Hastings. A housecarl he is close beside his lord at the last and fails to fend off a fatal blow directed at the king. Guilt of this and love of home kept him in exile. Now he recalls what English democracy was and how it was lost - "for a thousand years". Dispensing with the second millenium we can now likewise look back to the first for some distant mirror of ourselves. Here is one, fun-house distorted at times, silly and gloomy by turns, but for all its fictions striking home at last.
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