Rating: Summary: An Exciting Story Chronicled by a Masterful Storyteller Review: Amanda Scott's sweeping novel takes place in Tribal Britain in the 1st century A.D. She builds a believable story from the fragments of recorded Roman history that describe the pre-Roman Iron Age. Modern archaeology provides scraps for her imaginative fiction. Boudica lived, but her story is a rich fabrication that makes one yearn for more in subsequent books.Young Breaca nic Graine witnesses her mother's murder by a renegade Coritani warrior. The girl grabs her father's boar spear and kills the intruder, earning her first red kill-feather, the mark of an Eceni warrior. Breaca dreams, however, of holding the title of Dreamer, a coveted tribal position. A Dreamer possesses the gift of witnessing future events and interpreting visions of life and death. Dreamers are accompanied and protected by Warriors. Additional major players in Scott's drama are Ban, Breaca's half-brother; Caradoc, third son of Cunobelin, the Sun-Hound; Corvus, a shipwrecked soldier of Rome; and Airmid, Breaca's Eceni Dreamer and friend. Throughout the tale, Ban's life and aspirations are second only to Breaca's. Ban, at eight years, experiences his first dream and is the potential greatest Dreamer of the Eceni. His path leads to distant lands, first as slave and then as Roman citizen, with his eventual return to Eceni territory. Breaca accepts her place as Warrior and heir apparent to succeed her mother as tribal leader. She lives a bittersweet existence, forsaking womanly love for the training and ritual behavior befitting a warrior princess. DREAMING THE EAGLE is a story of peaceful agrarian peoples who defend their homes when provoked by aggression. Love and dependence upon animals is a featured keynote of the novel. Hounds are hunters, companions and needed warriors when tribes are attacked. Horses are used for war as well. Ban devotes himself to the care of an angry multicolored mare he called the Crow. She performs for him when his life is at risk, killing those who attack with the thrust of her mighty hooves. The author takes license with history in her telling of the Roman invasion of Britain by the legions of Caligula. He is shown to be licentious, evil, crafty, self-serving and vain. From other historians, we can agree with Scott's assessments of Caligula. He, among other self-serving men, is the hated enemy. Scott catalogues her story with lists of names, their pronunciations, tribal groups and their locations, maps of probable tribal lands and Roman invasion routes. Her descriptions of battles, their outcomes, personal struggles and resolutions are developed with poetic beauty. DREAMING THE EAGLE is an exciting story chronicled by a masterful storyteller. If Iron Age existence was an iota of the reality Scott pictures, we can identify with and cheer for her people. --- Reviewed by Judy Gigstad
Rating: Summary: Needs improvement.... Review: Compared to McCullough, this offering from Scott wasn't impressive, but perhaps understandably so. 'Boudica' from Manda Scott tends to follow a well-trodden formula in its plot technique. It is a methodology repeated in many current offerings in this rapidly expanding sub genre of historical fiction which, admittedly, has the benefit of enabling the reader to discern more easily the excellent from the mediocre. The opening chapters of the first of this trilogy inevitably present us with the childhoods of Ban and Breaca and move onwards through the latter's development into an Eceni warrior, multiple battles, soul searching and growth. We are pointed towards the Eceni (another interpretation of the spelling of the British tribe I haven't come across - along with the one 'c' Boudica) as being a peoples emerging from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age, the usual (and accurate) place of tribal honour being given to the smith. From Breaca's killing of the Coritani warrior raider to her first crafting of a brooch, to her first sword we move from one important educational episode to the next with moral purpose to build reason behind the adult character to come. Fairly typical of historical fictional biography and it enables the author to firmly establish character. Yet, my biggest problem with this novel is the unreality of age and intellectual maturity. The main characters all seem to be in early adolesence yet are treated by the adults and act as though they are in their thirties or more, making tribe-affecting decisions and taking usually hard-earned experience actions with unsettling aplomb. In makes the entire novel less credible. Admittedly, we know nothing about Boudicea's (if you prefer the Victorian spelling) youth and thus the opener of this trilogy is pure fantasy, but it takes it to heights that are a little incredulous. So much so that by the time the entire entourage takes a little trip to Mona reality is entirely suspended. The other problem was that the novel lacks that necessary requirement of any trilogy opener - the ability to provide a gripping story. I found it very easy to stop mid-paragraph do something else and then come back and not feel I'd missed much. It did not inspire page turning. In fact, I confess I read 4 other novels between this one. So, the book was well written, technique well-crafted, it possessed plot and yet...I found it hard to empathise with most of the characters and I wasn't gripped - the page turning quality never kicked in to the point that I hope the second novel is much improved over this offering.
Rating: Summary: A great find! Review: Four and a half stars actually. I bought this book at an English bookstore in Paris, hoping that it would be as good as the back cover promised. I've never read any of Manda Scott's other work, as I'm not into horror, but I love historical fiction, and I thought I'd give this one a try. I love this book, and can't wait for the rest of the trilogy! Very well written, and if you are needing a comparison, then I would say on a par with "Mists of Avalon" by Marion Zimmer Bradley. The characters are well developed with depth and detail, the battle scenes realistically bloody and gruesome, and the dialog believable. I definitely recommend this book!
Rating: Summary: Dreaming the Eagle (Boudica, Book 1) Review: I absolutely loved this book.. I felt I was really THERE, that I could see it all taking place. I read quite a bit of fiction, but this is one of the few books that has accomplished that particular feat. I didn't feel quite the same connection with the second book ("Dreaming the Bull" (Boudica, Book 2)), but still eagerly look forward to the third, "Dreaming the Hound" (Boudica, Part 3) I consider this trilogy a "keeper". Those that are kept and read again periodically, just for the enjoyment of them.
Rating: Summary: Disapointing Review: I can only speak to the entertainment value of the book, which I found dull and disapointing. As a fan of historical novels, when I purchased this book, I was looking forward to delving into a reconstruction of the Celtic past. I sought a sense of time and place, neither of which I felt were well developed or well researched in this novel. The character development lacked depth or age-appropriate emotion, and I felt I didn't connect or identify with any of them as I was meant to. The author's writing style reads as though it is forced, and many of the dramatic scenes in the book are over-stated or imbued with angst I found difficult to relate to. Most of the relationships the characters develop are pedophilic and perhaps incestuous, a detail I felt unnecessary and at times uncomfortable. It isn't a novel I would recommend, and I won't be following the trilogy.
Rating: Summary: Dreaming the Eagle Review: I enjoyed this overall but have some quibbles. Firstly, though the author appends a bibliography, I find her portrayal of pre-Roman Celtic cultures less than believable. They're *interesting* people, as she portrays them, but nothing that I, as a non-expert, have read about these cultures' actual religion, social structure, or archeology matches what Scott has devised. We don't know much about early Celtic religion, but Scott's book doesn't even take into account what we do know; here are the Iceni apparently without Epona (though Scott spells them 'Eceni' for some reason). She seems to have based her Celts on Native Americans to some extent (dreams of totem animals, for example), and I'm not sure there's historical justification for that. I was confused by the portrayal of Boudica as fighting beside Caractacus against an initial Roman invasion (the work on Boudica I have previously seen has her first encountering Romans in her own homeland), and I found the gender equality in the society unbelievable. I could accept spiritual and perhaps political power in women's hands, but I can't believe that women warriors would be common in a culture that fights primarily hand to hand. However, I was able to look past these issues and think of the book as semi-fantasy, and on that level I enjoyed it. The plot is dramatic, perhaps a bit over-long, but with plenty of action and lots of pain for the characters. The latter are reasonably appealing, with the troubled Ban a standout. I was disappointed with the rapid demise of Amminios, who was shaping up to be an intelligent and interesting antagonist. But the dark ending makes up for a lot. I will be reading the sequel.
Rating: Summary: Lovely Review: I thoroughly enjoyed this book, it brought people to life who are barely mentioned by history and re-created (if fictionally) a people long absorbed on the island nation.
I am not a critic, but I'm a voracious reader, and on the topic of Boadicea, I have read but ONE other account of her life, that by Pauline Gedge. It was also quite a gripping, absorbing and read-until-2 a.m. book.
If we are not to believe everything Scott creates about the Iceni/Eceni culture, why do we have reason to disbelieve, either? We were not there and have relatively little material culture from which to guess at the tribe's actual life. I live in a country that still retains many tribes which survive the onslaught of western civilization, and most of them have lost many portions of their culture. If Scotts is not to be believed, at least she creates a plausible, interesting one.
More importantly, to me at least, Scott reminds us of the possibilities of spiritual life interacting with outer life, the possibilities that many have lost. Dreamers? Wow. Warriors? Too much for me. If I was plunked down into Iceni life, I'd be hard put to do the things they probably did every day to survive. Knowing that basic bit about ancient peoples is enough to remind me of what a drastically different life I have ... and how lucky I am to descend from such tough folk.
Rating: Summary: Excellnt historical fiction Review: In 32 AD Britain, eleven years old Breaca only wants to be a Dreamer foretelling the future for her tribe. However, destiny provides her a different role when she slays the warrior who just killed her mother, Graine, the hereditary leader of the Eceni. Her father Eburovic reacts with elation as he concludes he needs no son with a fighter like his daughter Breaca. Over the next seven-eight years Breaca becomes a warrior leader of the Eceni. She meets and falls in love with Caradac, perhaps the only male that can claim to be her peer as a warrior. She also cherishes, perhaps loves, her half-brother Ban, as powerful a Dreamer as there ever has been though he wants to be a warrior like his sibling. However, their world of magic and tribal disputes is on the verge of ending as an outside force, the Romans, has crossed from Gaul intent on conquering. DREAMING THE EAGLE, the first of Manda Scott's Boudica trilogy, is a tremendous ancient historical biography that brings a vivid a picture of Britain during the decade just prior to and at the beginning of the Roman invasion. The story line is rich with a feel for the atmosphere of Druid Britain yet cleverly interwoven into the prime theme of the life of the legendary warrior queen. The cast is cleverly used to enhance understanding of the heroine in her late preadolescent and teen years so that the reader receives a deep well-written, gripping novel that never slows down. Perhaps the only disappointment is that readers will have to wait for Manda Scott's next installment. Harriet Klausner
Rating: Summary: Excellnt historical fiction Review: In 32 AD Britain, eleven years old Breaca only wants to be a Dreamer foretelling the future for her tribe. However, destiny provides her a different role when she slays the warrior who just killed her mother, Graine, the hereditary leader of the Eceni. Her father Eburovic reacts with elation as he concludes he needs no son with a fighter like his daughter Breaca. Over the next seven-eight years Breaca becomes a warrior leader of the Eceni. She meets and falls in love with Caradac, perhaps the only male that can claim to be her peer as a warrior. She also cherishes, perhaps loves, her half-brother Ban, as powerful a Dreamer as there ever has been though he wants to be a warrior like his sibling. However, their world of magic and tribal disputes is on the verge of ending as an outside force, the Romans, has crossed from Gaul intent on conquering. DREAMING THE EAGLE, the first of Manda Scott's Boudica trilogy, is a tremendous ancient historical biography that brings a vivid a picture of Britain during the decade just prior to and at the beginning of the Roman invasion. The story line is rich with a feel for the atmosphere of Druid Britain yet cleverly interwoven into the prime theme of the life of the legendary warrior queen. The cast is cleverly used to enhance understanding of the heroine in her late preadolescent and teen years so that the reader receives a deep well-written, gripping novel that never slows down. Perhaps the only disappointment is that readers will have to wait for Manda Scott's next installment. Harriet Klausner
Rating: Summary: lacks character development, dialogue, and plot Review: The best things about this book are the battle scenes and the historical setting. Unfortunately the characters never feel very real or believable. Key characters like Eburovic (Breaca's father) figure prominently in some sections and then disappear from the story even though they haven't gone anywhere. The second most important character, Ban (Breaca's brother), never develops a personality of his own and never feels remotely convincing. Buyers should also be warned that sections of the book include episodes of homosexuality, rape, and sexual mutilation. Some sections are gratuitously perverse, while at other points the book reads like a gay romance novel. This book is definitely not appropriate for children.
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