Home :: Books :: Literature & Fiction  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction

Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Unicorn Hunt : The Fifth Book of the House of Niccolo (Dunnett, Dorothy. House of Niccolo, 5th.)

The Unicorn Hunt : The Fifth Book of the House of Niccolo (Dunnett, Dorothy. House of Niccolo, 5th.)

List Price: $15.95
Your Price: $10.85
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: There is a thin line between madness and genius.
Review: After the compartively linear plotting of Scales of Gold, Dunnett's back to her wonderful tricks in this book. Niccolo and friends (and enemies) continue to tear about the known world, making modern day travelers envious (altho we do wind up in fewer dungeons than the resilient). This volume starts in Scotland, but the ferment in the Eastern Mediterranean is still the focus of the plot. Dunnett has an amazing ability to weave intricate plots, then resolve or dissolve them within a few paragraphs, leaving the reader breathless. She continues to capture the essence of each country that Niccolo explores. Her descriptions of Cairo can serve as a guide for modern travelers -- having visited Cairo a year ago, her descriptions of medieval Cairo evoked memories of the khans and citadel.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Renaissance Scotland, Italy and Cairo!
Review: I enjoyed this book much more than the previous - Scales of Gold. Maybe because Ms. Dunnett went back to her original form of storytelling which combines history, geography, romance and high drama. This is an "edge of your seat" type of book even though it is longer than the others previously in this series. We see Nicholas with a whole new talent to add to his arsenal - that of divining. Yes these books are a bit soap-operaish, but they are exciting nonetheless. In this particular segment we get to see a lot more of Dr. Tobias. He is a treasure, and a great foil for Nicholas' impulsiveness. His Love-Hate relationship with Nicholas continues, but also develops into a trust. I wondered why Nicholas didn't take this earthy doctor into his confidence sooner. Toby is a wonderful character! We also see a confrontation between Nicholas and his erstwhile father, but true to form, it is not resolved, so we know we have to read further. I wouldn't recommend this series to the faint of heart. It takes a lot of effort and emotion to get through it, but it is worth it in the end, if only for the history lesson.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Renaissance Scotland, Italy and Cairo!
Review: I enjoyed this book much more than the previous - Scales of Gold. Maybe because Ms. Dunnett went back to her original form of storytelling which combines history, geography, romance and high drama. This is an "edge of your seat" type of book even though it is longer than the others previously in this series. We see Nicholas with a whole new talent to add to his arsenal - that of divining. Yes these books are a bit soap-operaish, but they are exciting nonetheless. In this particular segment we get to see a lot more of Dr. Tobias. He is a treasure, and a great foil for Nicholas' impulsiveness. His Love-Hate relationship with Nicholas continues, but also develops into a trust. I wondered why Nicholas didn't take this earthy doctor into his confidence sooner. Toby is a wonderful character! We also see a confrontation between Nicholas and his erstwhile father, but true to form, it is not resolved, so we know we have to read further. I wouldn't recommend this series to the faint of heart. It takes a lot of effort and emotion to get through it, but it is worth it in the end, if only for the history lesson.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: my review
Review: In this book of the Niccolo Series, we are introduced to the race set by Gelis and Nicholas to outsmart eachother. It was started by Gelis, trying to avenge her sister's death, but Nicholas understands he must do this to try and win her heart for good. She claims she is carrying the son of his archrival, Simon de St. Pol. He decides to travel to Scotland to find the truth. At the same time, he finds Scotland a great market to increase his fortune.

Pursuing Gelis, Nicholas has to find out if the child is finally born and what sex it is. Once he finds out, Gelis hides once more from him. They travel to Cairo, the Sinai Desert and end up in Cyprus once more. The book closes on the Carnival in Venice and a new discovery for Nicholas.

In this book we are newly introduced to Dorothy Dunnett's best: Scotland. She can present the atmosphere and living customs of the time with incredible clarity and knowledge. The people, the rulers, the history, the places, everything is depicted with accuracy and made very interesting.

I have also enjoyed and learned a lot by this book. Be it about European history as well as middle eastern.

I am on my way to reading the sixth book...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: my review
Review: In this book of the Niccolo Series, we are introduced to the race set by Gelis and Nicholas to outsmart eachother. It was started by Gelis, trying to avenge her sister's death, but Nicholas understands he must do this to try and win her heart for good. She claims she is carrying the son of his archrival, Simon de St. Pol. He decides to travel to Scotland to find the truth. At the same time, he finds Scotland a great market to increase his fortune.

Pursuing Gelis, Nicholas has to find out if the child is finally born and what sex it is. Once he finds out, Gelis hides once more from him. They travel to Cairo, the Sinai Desert and end up in Cyprus once more. The book closes on the Carnival in Venice and a new discovery for Nicholas.

In this book we are newly introduced to Dorothy Dunnett's best: Scotland. She can present the atmosphere and living customs of the time with incredible clarity and knowledge. The people, the rulers, the history, the places, everything is depicted with accuracy and made very interesting.

I have also enjoyed and learned a lot by this book. Be it about European history as well as middle eastern.

I am on my way to reading the sixth book...

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: There is a thin line between madness and genius.
Review: Nicholas has a new talent to add to his already stunning arsenal. The confrontation between father and son finally is realized with both surviving the encounter, but they are forever changed. Ms. Dunnett lets fans have a taste of happiness for Nicholas in the end but don't count the happiness to last. Readers know it never does. True to her form, she mixes politics, commerce and romance with skill and in doing so, weaves a story so deep and complex fans are left begging for more.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: revenge and romance
Review: This literate and witty historical novel is the fifth volume of Dunnett's epic "The House of Niccolo." It continues to follow the fortunes, machinations and torments of Nicholas vander Poele, the former Flemish apprentice who rose from the troubled circumstances of his birth to become a wealthy banker and knight.

As the story opens it is 1468 and Nicholas is in Scotland, newly married but without his wife. He has renounced claims of kinship with his father and enemy, Simon de St. Pol, and is now calling himself de Fleury, after his mother's family.

His presence in Scotland is puzzling to his partners in his Venetian bank as affairs elsewhere need tending and Nicholas seems to be diverting vast resources to building a new trading empire in Scotland. But Nicholas is plotting.

Having learned on his wedding night that his bride, Gelis van Borselen, is pregnant with Simon de St. Pols' child - probably in revenge for Nicholas' secret siring of Simon's son with Gelis' sister - Nicholas has designed an elaborate scheme for his own revenge.

Amid scenes of royal pageantry, jousting and sumptuous feasting, Nicholas appears a mysterious figure, taking water while others drink wine, remaining on the sidelines while others display their skills, dressing always in black - the world's most expensive dye.

But one winter night he takes advantage of the of the confusion of a royal hunt to have Simon abducted, terrified, humiliated and delivered to him at the salt works - a dark, hot factory of bubbling cauldrons and immense furnaces where an exhausting battle of wills, wit and strength ensues. This deadly and vividly visceral struggle is interrupted before its conclusion and Nicholas is forced to leave Scotland to attend the death of a friend.

All this less than a quarter way into the book. And it's only part 1 of Nicholas' scheme.

Still to come is a trading journey to the east and numerous tests of will with Nicholas' wife as well as the complications of secondary characters, one of the most interesting of which is Katalijne, a 14-year-old, sharp-witted girl of many talents.

All of Dunnett's characters are as complex and fore-sighted as her plot. The dialogue is witty and the atmosphere superlatively described. Although the novel stands alone, some of the motivations may be clearer to those familiar with earlier volumes. A synopsis of these precedes the narrative.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates