Post
by Stormbringer » Sat Oct 06, 2018 10:43 pm
As mentioned on the previous page, I am now reading the first book in Stephen R. Lawhead's Celtic Crusades trilogy, The Iron Lance.
I just started the third chapter and thus far it is really excellent. It is so nice to be back in a good book after reading three terribly dull ones.
Here is the synopsis:
In the year 1095, Pope Urban II declared war on the infidel. Kings, princes, and lords throughout Europe have joined the Crusade. To Murdo Ranulfson has fallen the duty of guarding his family's interests while his father and brothers fight to win Jerusalem. But when corrupt clergy prove enemies rather than protectors, Murdo must leave his native Scotland in search of his father. In the company of monks and warriors, he journeys far beyond the rolling fields of home, beyond the fabled Constantinople and the brooding walls of Antioch, to the Holy Land and the sword points of the Saracens. There, where blood, suffering, and human evil at its most horrifying are shot through with rays of the miraculous, he obtains the relic that will guide his life and the lives of his descendants for centuries. And there he grows from a callow youth to a man, trading cynicism for faith and selfishness for the heart of a leader. Steeped in heroism, treachery, and the clamor of battle, The Iron Lance begins a remarkable, masterfully woven epic trilogy of a Scottish noble family fighting for its existence and its faith during the age of the Great Crusades -- and of a secret society that will shape history for a thousand years.
Mighty good stuff!
Between tedium and fright
Such is the song of the nether world
The hissing of rats
And the jarring chants of angels