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Bernard Cornwell : Harlequin (Grail Quest S.)
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Author: Bernard Cornwell
Title: Harlequin (Grail Quest S.)
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Published in: English
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 496
Date: 2001-06-04
ISBN: 0006513840
Publisher: HarperCollins
Weight: 0.57 pounds
Size: 1.22 x 4.37 x 7.01 inches
Edition: reprint
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Description: Product Description
paperback, fine In stock shipped from our UK warehouse


Amazon Review
Following the phenomenal success of the Sharpe novels set in the Napoleonic Wars, Bernard Cornwell has turned his storytelling talents to another great moment in English history, the Hundred Years War between England and France throughout the 14th century. Harlequin is the first book in Cornwell's Grail Quest series, which chronicles the adventures of young Thomas of Hookton, "a big, bony, black-haired country boy". Thomas rejects the church in favour of the life of an archer in France after his village is brutally sacked by the French. The young Thomas fights back against the French with his bow, and "in that one instant, as the first arrow slid into the sky, he knew he wanted nothing more from life". He vows to seek revenge on the plains of France, and recover the holy relic of St. George stolen from his village by the sinister "harlequin" with whose destiny Thomas finds himself inextricably entwined. The rest of the action moves at a hectic pace across the violent and bloody battlefields of northern France, as Thomas falls for a beautiful French widow nicknamed "the Blackbird", makes a mortal enemy of the "poor, bitter and ambitious" Sir Simon Jekyll, and follows the ensign of King Edward III and his heroic son, the Black Prince. Harlequin is a fast-paced and graphic recreation of the Hundred Years War, despite a rather gratuitous fixation on rape and pillage. The action comes thick and fast, although it remains to be seen if Thomas of Hookton has the wit and flair of Cornwell's other great heroic creation, Richard Sharpe. --Jerry Brotton

Reviews: Ed Hahn (USA: MT) (2009/03/05):
I am constantly surprised, though I shouldn't be, at Cornwell's ability to re-create an historical era.

In this story,(also titled "Archer's Tale" in its U.S. Edition) the first of The three book "Grail" series, Thomas of Hookton, becomes an archer in the army of Edward the 2nd at the beginning of the Hundred Year's war between England and France (mid 14th century).

In typical Cornwell style, Thomas overcomes his low birth (he's the bastard son of a priest) and more than a few near death experiences to become a leader of the group of archers he has joined. He also falls in love a couple times and ends up playing a crucial role in the battle of Crecy.

The battle scenes as usual are explicit and extremely well-done. It's fascinating to compare and contrast the battle strategies of the Middle Ages in this series with the strategies of 9th century England in the Uthred/Alfred Series, the Napoleonic Wars in the Richard Sharpe Series and the American Civil War in the Starbuck Chronicles. His research must be excellent to be able to bring us such historically correct detail in the context of his fictional characterizations. His historical notes at the conclusion of each book are well-worth reading and indicate how thorough he has been in his research.

I can hardly wait to get to the next book in the series, "Vagabond".



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