| The
Triumph of the Sun |
Wilbur
Smith
Pan
Macmillan |
|
600 pages $20.00 |
|
 |
LIKE
an old elephant heading back to that familiar watering
hole, Wilbur Smith has returned to the territory he
knows best.
Africa, where men are men and women go weak at the knees
in rip-roaring, lusty, busty tales based on actual historical
events but featuring one of his heroic families, the
Courtneys or the Ballantynes.
But wait, theres more.
In retelling the story of the Mahdis rebellion
in the Sudan in the 1880s and the death of British General
Charles Gordon, he has brought the Courtneys and the
Ballantynes together as they battle the hordes of the
Mahdi, a Sudanese Islamic revivalist.
Naturally theres a beautiful girl, Rebecca Benbrook,
who is torn between the handsome officer, Penrod Ballantyne,
and the roguish trader, Ryder Courtney.
Its by-the-numbers standard Wilbur Smith fare.
The prolific author knows hes on a good thing,
so why mess with a winning formula?
Still, if youve got a long plane ride or a weekend
indoors because of foul weather, then Triumph of the
Sun could be just the trick to while away the hours.
David Sibley
|
| The
Last Kingdom |
Bernard
Cornwell
Harper
Collins |
|
500 pages $18.95 |
|
 |
MASTER
historical novelist Bernard Cornwells massive
legion of fans wont be disappointed by the latest
series to come from his prolific pen.
The Last Kingdom is the first of a series of books on
Alfred the Great, the king who withstood the Viking
armies to create the foundations of the kingdom which
has survived to today.
As usual, Cornwell has created a flawed but feisty protagonist,
Uhtred of Bebbanburg, a young Anglo-Saxon warrior, with
the story told from his perspective.
Uhtred is the heir to the earldom of Bebbanburgh, now
known as Bamburgh, in northern England, after his older
brother and his father are killed by Viking raiders.
The raiders, led by the merciless brothers Ubba and
Ivar the Boneless, destroy the Kingdom of Northumbria
in a battle at York where Uhtred is captured and made
a slave of a Viking chieftain, Ragnar.
Cornwells depiction of 9th-century England is
meticulous, especially the battle scenes where the horror
and savagery of the battles of that era comes alive.john
If you havent read Bernard Cornwell yet, then
try The Last Kingdom it could well whet your
appetite for more of his writing.
David Sibley
|