counter
about us
 
The Pillars of the Earth | great book
 
 



 The Pillars of the...  

The Pillars of the Earth

NAL, 2007

average customer review:based on 1258 reviews
view larger image
 for more information click here

     highly recommended  highly recommended




WOW - What A Marathon !

This is a fabulous book of over 1000 pages but don't be daunted by the size of it. Many authors would have made this into a trilogy costing the reader 3 x $20.00 but this single book is very good value for money. The story follows three or four main groups of people through around fifty years of their lives with never a dull moment. It's a great reminder of how our ancestors used to live and how Medieval Britain used to be a savage, tribal country with much lawlessness. The story smoothly flows between monasteries, castles and the building of a cathedral. Although monks play a large part I certainly wouldn't say it is a religious book, on the contrary, it shows deviousness and politics between the monasteries and the people who run them. This book is a great find and very much look forward to reading the next book set in Kingsbridge - World Without End.




 for more information click here


great book

My husband is a picky reader and not alot of fiction appeals to him. This book has got him. I can't wait to get it after him


A Medieval "If You Build It, They Will Come"

Without doubt, Ken Follett's 950+ page tome, THE PILLARS OF THE EARTH, accomplishes at least one of the main pleasures of a lengthy (historical) novel -- to transport its readers convincingly to another time and place. In this instance, Follett opens up the world of 12th Century southern England at a time when the Roman Catholic Church shared power uneasily with the English Crown. It was also a time when architecture, in the form of grand cathedrals, was making prodigious artistic and technological leaps through increased understanding and use of such elements as pointed arches, flying buttresses, and stained glass.

The book opens with a young man's hanging and the curse pronounced by a pregnant, golden-eyed, 15-year old woman in the year 1123, and it is not until the closing pages (in the year 1174) that Follett reveals the full connection between this event and the rest of his story. For the many pages in between, the author traces the development of the small fictional town of Kingsbridge and the halting replacement of its decidedly rundown church with a magnificent new cathedral. A host of characters fill these pages: the son and daughter of a defeated earl, a striving family seeking to take their place in the earldom, a visionary young mason, a woman who lives with her son in a cave in the forest, a young monk of surprising managerial and political ability, and another clergyman whose sights are set on becoming a bishop or even more. Beyond the town limits, a seemingly endless stream of political battles and actual wars ensue, much of it precipitated by civil war over the English throne following the death of Henry I. During the period known in English history as the Anarchy, earls align and realign as the aspirants, King Stephen and his half-sister Matilda (here called Maud), seek a military resolution. The fortunes of Kingsbridge and its neighboring town of Shiring mirror those of Stephen and Maud (and eventually, Maud's son Henry Plantagenet). The Catholic Church is a powerful player in these struggles at both the national and local levels, vitally interested in the outcomes as it seeks to protect its own interests and further its wealth and power.

To Follett's credit, these external struggles flesh out the background to his main characters' lives without getting in their way. THE PILLARS OF THE EARTH is a solidly human story, told through the lives, aspirations, and fears of those individuals. Over the course of roughly forty years, the young monk Philip establishes himself as a successful prior, and his town of Kingsbridge grows in concert with its rising new cathedral. There are setbacks galore along the way, from rapes, massacres, and dirty tricks to famines, fires, and failed enterprises. Many are presented as nearly insurmountable obstacles, requiring all the cleverness and pluck of the book's heroes to overcome them. And therein lies the kernel of the book's greatest flaw.

For all the author's efforts to tell the story of an architectural wonder, his plot is filled with the melodrama of dangers escaped and impossible odds overcome. To sustain so many cliff-hanging events, Follett has to rely on over-the-top characters who are more caricature than simply human. Prior Philip is preternaturally cool, the mason Tom Builder and his successor Jack are gifted visionaries, William Hamleigh and his hideously boil-ridden mother Regan are sadistic evil incarnate, and the bishop Waleran Bigod is a bloodless, scheming worm. Lady Aliena - childhood rape victim, dispossessed landowner, 12th Century feminist, fearless fighter and horsewoman, bold rejecter of organized religion, world class entrepreneur - is certainly the book's most outlandish character, a sop to 21st Century political correctness. The heroes are heroic to the nth degree, the villains villainous in the same way; this tendency toward overkill applies as well to even many of the book's lesser characters.

For those willing to accept these comic book personas as presented for the sake of an escapist historical novel, the rest is easy. THE PILLARS OF THE EARTH draws willing readers effectively into its medieval world, with only an occasional hiccup when his characters mouth words like "puke" that sound a touch too modern. Nevertheless, he creates an engrossing world filled with monks and peasants, knights and nobility. Follett is an adept storyteller, capable of making a book of nearly 1,000 pages read like something much shorter. That in itself is no small accomplishment as well as a sure testimonial that this book is an entertaining, fully transporting read.



 for more information click here


reviews: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, page 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15



products you might be interested in




recommendations

Kindle Summer Reading for Everyone
Pre-Kindle Book Wish List
Pamela's Kindle Wishlist
Favorite Kindle books
My Kindle Wishlist






 




pillars of the, earth, pillars



Google      toavi.com    web
apparel
baby
beauty
books
camera photo
classical music
computers
dvd
electronics
gourmet food
health personal care
kitchen
office products
outdoor living
computer video games
popular music
software
sporting goods
tools hardware
toys-games
vhs
watches jewelry







randomly chosen


VHS: Enemy Territory