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The Scorpion Child [Illustrated] [Paperback]

Kristina O'Donnelly (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 10, 2000
Sequel to previously published novel, The Horseman (Hollis Books, VA, 1999), and part of the Lands of the Morning Series, The Scorpion Child is independently plotted and it's a gritty, exciting, controversial novel or reincarnation. Enter Ariadne's dangerous, exotic world, if you dare, for The Scorpion Child might make you a believer! American stage and screen star Daniel Saxon, Ariadne (an American expatriate novelist married to a Turk) and Burhan Kayhanolu (he is an Advisor to the Turkish Military Junta ) are the protagonists, which is a fast-paced, colorful and controversial political thriller. The plot flows between New York, California and Istanbul, on a cinemascopic reel of romance, high-stakes terrorism, sex, intrigue, and subtle undercurrents of mysticism as well as reincarnation, the idea of the latter presented in a no-nonsense, thought-provoking manner.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

Although part of Lands of the Morning Quintet series, The Scorpion Child is independently plotted, and is the sequel to the critically acclaimed novel, The Horseman.

Lands of the Morning Quintet - A sweeping, tri-continental series of related, yet independently plotted epic novels (each story stands on its own).

From Keltia to Anatolia ... From the Lady of the Unicorn, to Mevlana... a unique blend of cultures, legends and history, both ancient and contemporary ... an offering to bridge the gaps Mankind is wont to create....

The fruit of a lifetime of research and writing, this series is fiction based upon authentic, contemporary as well as historical backgrounds and events. Character Profiles for The Scorpion Child: Daniel Saxon - the handsome American star of TV, stage and screen, is a spirited man and an accomplished Shakespearean actor. Newly divorced from his wife of twenty five years, he is fighting to overcome alcoholism and a midlife crisis. Daniel has two children, Katrina, ambitious and assertive,clawing her way up as a television producer, and Matthew, introspective and rebellious. During the course of the novel, Matthew will be assassinated by a terrorist as a revenge for Daniel’s friendship with Ariadne.

Ariadne - only a few people know that her marriage to Burhan, an amalgam of passion, turbulence and disenchantment, is strained to the breaking point, marked by the tragic murder of their son by terrorists. She has come to New York to promote her novel based on Chatalhoyuk, an eight-thousand year old neolithic town in Konya, Turkey. As she is trying to sort out her life, she is also writing a controversial book about the Turkish-Armenian conflict, which brands her as an enemy of the Armenian people, and makes her the target of protest and abuse.

Burhan - destiny has extracted from him a terrible personal price for his meteoric ascendancy in politics. Be that as it may, ever the undaunted idealist, he is fighting for the betterment of his people at all cost. Presently, he is an Advisor to the Turkish Military Junta as they prepare to re-launch democracy. Also, however, he is leading a dragnet against international terrorism sponsored by Anika Alkibiades’ dictatorial faction, which is still operating (and succeeding) by employing different special interest groups, from Militant Islam to Armenian and Kurdish, terrorists. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

About the Author

Born in Rome, Italy, O'Donnelly was a film actress, and later a journalist both in Europe and the United States. Also, she was an active member and later an officer, of the Newspaper Guild of America, for 12 years. She is the author of The Horseman, published by Hollis Books, VA, USA, and Waltz With the Wind (nom de plum: Karina di Cuore) published by Rose International Publishing House Inc. USA, and The Scorpion Child (sequel to The Horseman) also by R.I.P.H. Inc.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 324 pages
  • Publisher: Rose International Publishing House; illustrated edition edition (November 10, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1930574010
  • ISBN-13: 978-1930574014
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.5 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,427,453 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Vita aka Kristina aka Karina, nicknamed A Lady For All Seasons, was an actress as well as an author and journalist, and more photos of her stormy, globe-trotting, universe-tripping life, can be found at www.ladyliterature.com

Kismet seems to have decreed that author editor journalist VITA KRISTINA O'DONNELLY, aka Vita Vendresha and Karina di Cuore, should lead a globe-trotting, multi-cultural, chameleon-life wrought with romance and drama, and thus end up writing thought-provoking exotic novels. Her odyssey began with her birth in Rome, Italy, after the Second World War. Her father Sami Alberto, aka David Vendresha, was a freedom-fighter, journalist and editor, and her Austrian mother Geraldine von Landeck, an opera singer and his best comrade-in-ideals.

Having met in Vienna, Austria during the raging fires of the Second World War, and married in Prague, Czechoslovakia, David and Geraldine then settled in Rome, Italy, at the end of the war, and Kristina was born 2 years later. A short while after, due to political persecution, the threesome had to leave Italy and settled in Turkey.

Growing up in Istanbul, in the 1960s, Kristina fell in love with Turkey and her gallant people. She was a child film-star and later a poet and a journalist and published a daily column in the major Istanbul daily. A die-hard romantic and idealist imbued with a can-do, will-do spirit, she strove to the best of her abilities to champion the rights of the down-trodden. At the age of 17, she defied her parents, eloped and married a 44-year old Turkish artist, who had convinced her that he shared her inclinations. The the union produced a much beloved son, Faik Kurt. However, the April-December marriage of an artist and writer, was soon confronted by the realities of life and sunk in stormy seas.

Six years later, Kristina had no choice but to leave, under traumatic circumstances.

After her arrival in New York, she restarted her life virtually from point zero. Although fluent in German, Turkish, Italian, her English could be termed at best "pidgin,' and her experience as an artist, writer and journalist, counted naught in the New World - and walking a road inlaid with razor-blades, she worked as a 24/7 maid, cook, window-cleaner, hair-stylist, door-to-door delivery person, and later on as a real estate sales person.

Few years later, Kristina married her soul-mate, blue-eyed Hibernian, Michael O'Donnelly (which led her to travel throughout Ireland and thus causing her to fall in love with the Irish people as well).

In time she moved up to be employed for the New York Daily News as an advertising rep., and then trailblazed as a newspaper union officer (The Newspaper Guild of America). Not surprisingly, her experiences in this electric environment inspired her to write the contemporary novel, Ride the Eagle (originally published by Worldwide Library; 2nd publishing by Rose International Publishing House). Readers called this novel "... a piece of Americana and a celebration of idealism." Ride the Eagle was sold in the U.S., Canada, Mexico, England, Spain, and Australia. (In May of 2003, Ride the Eagle, retitled as Sevgili Dusmanim (Beloved Enemy) was published in Turkey, by Epsilon Publishing House.)This was followed by the Turkish translation of The Scorpion Child, retitled as Sonsuzluga Isyan.

So far Kristina O'Donnelly has published 9 novels, with 5 more sitting in the pipeline.
And so, her quest to touch and perchance to help heal, the Universal Human Heart, goes on ....

The proverbial question begs: CAN YOU GO HOME AGAIN?

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars passion, passion and more passion, November 7, 2002
By 
P. Blue "bbblue" (LAS CRUCES, NM USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Scorpion Child (Paperback)
Passion, passion and more passion, but what else are you to expect from a Scorpio?!....its sting is nearly fatal! "The Scorpion Child" will make you wish to run away to exoticism, Constantinople and romance. This Scorpio heroine keeps her head cool among a maze of love, political and kharma intrigues, while everybody else is thrown into turmoil under her intense gaze and velvety touch. Like a real Scorpio, "The Scorpion Child" is fascinated by life and death issues, spirituality and passionately interested in sex, it has always an hypnotic appeal on Scorpio!....(be sure you have your sweetheart at hand while reading!).
One more time Kristina O'Donnelly masters the plot and romance while bringing us some invaluable insights, in this case about the Armenian-Turkish conflict. "The Scorpion Child" will give you an inlook at what a terrorist mind can be made of as well.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Perfect Reading, July 6, 2006
By 
This review is from: The Scorpion Child (Hardcover)
Kristina O'Donnelly again shows her miracle in the breath-taking novel 'The Scorpion Child'. I blame myself why I havent read this novel before. She blends her attractive imagination with politic reality. In the Scorpion Child, Ms O'Donnelly gives pure objective reflections on Turkish-Armenian Conflict. In such an era which we alltogether fight against terrorism in the world, the Scorpion Child gives the reader invaluable insights.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A love triangle in the midst of unrest and terrorism--strong stuff, July 2, 2006
This review is from: The Scorpion Child (Paperback)
Civil unrest continues in Turkey despite military rule. Burham Bey survived the attempts of Anika Alkibiades to recreate the Byzantine Empire, but the plots she set in motion continue and Turkey is torn by terrorists from the right, left, and Armenian separatists. Meanwhile, Burhan's estranged wife, Ariadne is back in New York after deserting Burhan due to a long-past affair and the son that resulted from that affair (as well as her reaction to the death of her own son, killed by terrorists).

Ariadne, now a successful author, meets and falls for a handsome American actor who is fighting his own battles against alcoholism and a problem staying faithful to any one woman. Ariadne's most recent book is a novel about past-lives and although David is a skeptic, he begins to receive hints that he and Ariadne once shared a sort of relationship in an earlier life--a relationship in which he was a priest/confessor.

Although she swears she has left Burhan forever, Ariadne remains drawn to him and is torn between the two men she loves. But in the larger context of Turkey's problems, the love triangle is doomed to explode. When their daughter, Leyla, vanishes into the international terrorist movement and a terrorist tracks Ariadne down to New York and attacks her in her apartment, Ariadne flees to Turkey and to Burhan. But the results of her affair with David remain, even as Ariadne and Burhan attempt to restore their damaged relationship.

Author Kristina O'Donnelly delivers a compelling story of personal growth and suffering. The story of DEFY ETERNITY: THE SCORPION CHILD is even more topical in the post-9/11 world than when O'Donnelly wrote it, and her message of the world being one people is certainly welcome.

Some readers (including me) may be troubled by O'Donnelly's arguments that Armenian Genocide of World War I was exagerated. Arguments about the actual events during this tragedy do not, however, detract from O'Donnelly's message that terrorist tactics are ultimately destructive of civilization.

DEFY ETERNITY: THE SCORPION CHILD is an emotionally moving story as the major characters of O'Donnelly's LANDS OF THE MORNING series age and suffer the consequences of their mistakes--and even of their victories. Readers who started with THE HORSEMAN and CLARION OF MIDNIGHT will definitely want to add this one to their to-be-read list. Although each book in the series stands alone, I found that DEFY ETERNITY: THE SCORPION CHILD in particular benefited from having read the earlier novels.

If you enjoy a novel with complex characters, plenty of action, and a strong thematic position, DEFY ETERNITY: THE SCORPION CHILD and, indeed, the entire LANDS OF THE MORNING series will be a welcome treat.
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