Pages: 400 (Paperback) ISBN: 0007219709 Pub: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd Pub date: 2007-02-05 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 1526
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Reader Reviews:Sharpe dressed as a Saxon (1/1 people found this helpful)When I started this series it was with the hope that it would be another trilogy like Cornwell's Wonderful Arthurian trilogy. However this series is far more like one of his Napeoleonic sagas, with each book being an individual story centred around a Saxon/ Viking version of Sharpe called Uhtred.
Starting to get repetative (1/1 people found this helpful)I loved the first two books, having read them in order one after the other for a couple of weeks now, and in particular found The Pale Horsemen especially worthy of praise. Therefore it was with some enjoyment that I settled down with this (slimmer) volume, the third in the series.
The Epic Tale Continues.............. (0/1 people found this helpful)If you have read and enjoyed the first two books in the series (The Last Kingdom, and The Pale Horseman) then you will love this too as it is just as good. This time Uhtred settles a score with his old enemies from the 1st book Kjartan the cruel and his son and at some point he ends up as a slave until Ragnar saves him and creates an assault on Kjartans fortress. I'm not going to ruin the story, it is exellent, thats all you need to know. This entire series brings alive the struggle of the small English kingdoms against the Vikings and how they had to unite in order to survive and slowly a new kingdom began to emerge, that kingdom is England. This series brings alive Englands struggle better then any history book or movie. You must read it its awesome, I'm already enjoying the 4th book which has started out very violent-i love it. Lords of the North is the third book in the Saxon Stories (0/0 people found this helpful)Cornwell promises that more - perhaps many more - are in the offing. As is almost obligatory, let me acknowldge that I am a big Cornwell fan - I've read many of the Sharpe books, part of the Grail series and all three of the Saxon Stories.
Moves along like the others (0/0 people found this helpful)More of the same really. The pace moves along quite quickly and this passes the time when one wants a less demanding read. But Uthred is for me as unsympathetic a character as ever, going around the country slaughtering everyone who stands in his way. The broad historical backdrop and background to Alfred and the Vikings are what keep me reading and what will undoubtedly make me read Sword Song when it comes out in paperback. Similar ProductsSword Song (Alfred the Great 4) Excalibur: A Novel of Arthur (A Novel of Arthur: The Warlord Chronicles) Enemy of God: A Novel of Arthur (A Novel of Arthur: The Warlord Chronicles) CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Fiction -> Genre -> Historical
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