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Eldorado

Eldorado

List Price: $35.95
Your Price: $22.65
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Before you get mad...
Review: ...you should know one small fact. This copy is ABRIDGED!

Whoever did it did not see fit to inform readers of this but the fact remains. Three whole chapters were cut from this edition.

I totally agree that this book is really great but I also like to know that I am reading the whole book.

Try to find an older edition, read it and see what I mean. It will make much more sense

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Pimpernel at his very best!
Review: Determined to save the young Prince Louis, heir to the throne of France, Percy and the league embark upon their most dangerous adventure yet. Everything goes well until Armand, struck by Cupid's arrow, disobeys orders to try and help his ladylove, landing Percy right in Chauvlin's hands. Will he escape from the darkest cells of the Conciergre? Will he be able to save the Dauphin? Wait and see!

This is my favorite of all the Pimpernel books. With its numerous plot twists and suprise ending, this is one of my favorite books altogether. Not to mention it has some great scenes between Percy and Marguerite as Percy is being tortured (yes! Tortured!) in prison. I sobbed miserably during that part. Of course, you'll proably end up hating Armand for the rest of your life, but that's a small price to pay for such a marvelous story!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Will Sir Percy triumph again?
Review: Eldorado is another novel in Baroness Orczy's series of novels featuring the Scarlet Pimpernel, the saviour of the French aristocracy during the Revolutionary Terror. Yet again Chauvelin is plotting to capture Sir Percy, and this time he may just succeed...

With the usual flair for narrative and incident, this is an interesting read, though as usual Margeurite is an annoying irritation to the story. Its very funny too when Sir Percy does not sleep for 17 days yet suffers no long term damage! Once more Chauvelin is the best character, and I always wish that he would hurry up and just kill The Scarlet Pimpernel. Still, this is a nice, relaxing and above all romantic book - don't you agree CFW?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful book!
Review: I love this book! It was really great! I thought it started out faster than the first book. The plot was really interesting and I was really wondering how they were going to make it. Evryone who liked the "The Scarlet Pimpernel" should read this book!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A romping good adventure!
Review: I've read about half of the Scarlet Pimpernel books, and this one is definitely my favorite thus far. I won't rehash the plot as others said it well here. Briefly, SP must save the Dauphin from the clutches of Robespierre and Chauvelin. Armand has to choose between his honor and his heart, and he chooses, forcing SP to clean up the mess, at great physical cost to himself. There was interesting character development for Armand, and I also liked the scenes with Sir Tony, who is my favorite of the peripheral characters. If you've seen the SP production with Anthony Andrew and Jane Seymour, part of the plot is taken from this book. Try it out! It's a romping good adventure, and not as lackluster or meandering as some of her other titles.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent sequel
Review: If you enjoyed The Scarlet Pimpernel, it's worth the effort to try to dig up a copy of the sequel.

Percy and the League try to smuggle the Dauphin out of France, which is complicated when Armand becomes disobedient after falling in love. I won't ruin what happens to Percy (if you look at other reviews they say), but it puts the Scarlet Pimpernel through a pretty bad ordeal.

This one is faster paced than The Scarlet Pimpernel, but it's still a little slow in the beginning. Once you hit the second part, though, it really speeds up. The scenes between Marguerite and Percy are great. I can't recommend this book enough. I read it in about three days (which would have been two if I wasn't falling asleep after staying up until 2 in the morning to try to finish it!)

However, getting hold of a copy is much harder than the original. Bucaneer Books does have a hard-cover copy in print, but parts of it are abridged. I would recommend either trying to find a used copy, getting a copy from the library, or importing a copy from the UK (I belive that edition is unabridged, although I'm not positive). But this book is worth the hassle it might take to get it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The passions of the weak that traps the strong
Review: So far I have read "The Scarlet Pimpernel," "The Elusive Pimpernel" and I had just finished "El Dorado." This last book wounded me emotionally so much I'm still hurting.

I had watched Jane Seymoure's version(1982) of the movie before so I had an idea of the plot. I knew Armand would be the cause of our hero's troubles but I didn't know it was going to be such a near death experience... The price Percy had to pay for Armand's folly was just too much.

SPOILER ALERT!!!
I was spell-bound by Percy's attitude through-out... he was a visionary but he was realistic enough to accept that 'mayhaps'... Chauvelin would win tis time. So he told Sir Andrews before going back to Paris: <>

But then, I was horrified when I understood the depth of Armand's folly. In the movie, he was just impulsively stupid. The book reveals a much darker truth... so terrible that Percy had to try hard to conceal it from Margarite. He forgave Armand for Margarite's sake, but if she knew... she would hate her brother for life, and that Percy had to keep from happening (since if he died, Margarite would have no one left but Armand).

And the comment the impulsive brother-in-law threw at Percy: "You do not know what love is!" This comment hit Percy so hard that he not only agrees with Armand but he mentions it several times after: "We both agreed that I do not know what love is." That's what he says, but his actions speak otherwise.

As for Armand, his way of loving is too selfish, impulsive and inmature. I wonder who was the one who really "didn't know..."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The passions of the weak that traps the strong
Review: So far I have read "The Scarlet Pimpernel," "The Elusive Pimpernel" and I had just finished "El Dorado." This last book wounded me emotionally so much I'm still hurting.

I had watched Jane Seymoure's version(1982) of the movie before so I had an idea of the plot. I knew Armand would be the cause of our hero's troubles but I didn't know it was going to be such a near death experience... The price Percy had to pay for Armand's folly was just too much.

SPOILER ALERT!!!
I was spell-bound by Percy's attitude through-out... he was a visionary but he was realistic enough to accept that 'mayhaps'... Chauvelin would win tis time. So he told Sir Andrews before going back to Paris: <<If after having waited for me... you neither see nor hear anything from me... tell Marguerite that in giving my life for her brother I gave it for her!>>

But then, I was horrified when I understood the depth of Armand's folly. In the movie, he was just impulsively stupid. The book reveals a much darker truth... so terrible that Percy had to try hard to conceal it from Margarite. He forgave Armand for Margarite's sake, but if she knew... she would hate her brother for life, and that Percy had to keep from happening (since if he died, Margarite would have no one left but Armand).

And the comment the impulsive brother-in-law threw at Percy: "You do not know what love is!" This comment hit Percy so hard that he not only agrees with Armand but he mentions it several times after: "We both agreed that I do not know what love is." That's what he says, but his actions speak otherwise.

As for Armand, his way of loving is too selfish, impulsive and inmature. I wonder who was the one who really "didn't know..."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "You do no know what it is to love."---St. Just
Review: This is definatley one of the best in the Scarlet Pimpernel series, if not THE best of those I've read thus far (seeing that most of the books are out of print). The story greatly depends on the power of love, from friendship love to romantic love. For Armand St. Just, the brother-in-law of the incredulous Sir Percy Blakeney, love gets him into trouble and causes him to doubt his role in the league of the Pimpernel. For Blakeney, loves inspires him to keep up the fight, even when he is betrayed, captured, and tortured. And poor Magurite is left to try her best to love and assist her husband in whatever way she can. Chauvelin sinks to an ultimate low to take his revenge on our hero, and you REALLY start to wonder how Percy's gonna get himself out of this one!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A jolly good tale! ha ha! what!
Review: This is perhaps the best Pimpernel tale I have read yet. Sir Percy Blakeney and his noble league of gentlemen attempt the rescue of "the most important life in France" in their battle against the Terror of the French republic. This time they are joined by Armand St Just, Marguerite's brother; but he compromises their scheme by unexpected love for an actress, disobeying orders in order to save her life. With disastrous consequences for his band, Sir Percy ends up stepping in to save them both.

As usual, Chauvelin is after revenge on his arch-enemy, the Scarlet Pimpernel. But will he at last succeed? or will another Boulogne-type catastrophe ensue?

A very good story indeed, with the usual flowing narrative from Orczy. The characters are interesting (Sir Percy in fine form) and the plots are compelling. But the most attractive aspect of this novel, as with all the Pimpernel stories, is the romance and sheer swashbuckling adventure.


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