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Women's Fiction
The Firebrand: A Novel

The Firebrand: A Novel

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

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A onderful saga of the fall of Troy
Review: This is a wonderful tale of the fall of Troy and the women in it. Telling this story from Kassandra's( the king's daugter) point of veiw; it capture's a reader's attention.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great book!
Review: This is an excellent book, espeicially if you like priestesses and war queens! Ever heard the story of how Troy fell? Hear it from a different point of view.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Wow! That's all I have to say!
Review: This book is a very good read and although I did read Mists first(10 all the way) I still really enjoyed this one.Kassandra,the main character faces problems that confront women today.I'm not saying that we hear supreme voices or are plagued by awful visions but women are still reveared as the weaker sex.Kassandra shows us how people can overcome their hardships and come out on top.My acvice read Mists after this one.The two books are not related but you won't be expecting such a big hit like Mists.Happy reading!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Worth reading
Review: The ancient city of Troy and it's inevitable destruction are played out in living colour in The Firebrand, another novel by MZ Bradley that approaches an epic myth through the eyes of the women. We see the events of the story from Kassandara's point of view, the crazy prophetess that no one believes in the more traditional tellings of the tale. Well, she sees the future, and no one listens, but in The Firebrand Kassandara is the only sane character around. "Look, I'm telling you guys, this place is about to blow!" " Yeah, whatever, get back to the kitchen, or the temple you old bag." Not exactly, but pretty close. Anyway, this book makes for a fine read; it has sex with humans AND gods, lots of violence with nasty wounds and infections, palace politics, temple politics, urban decay, free-wheeling Amazons, and drug induced religious experiences. Bradley has an amazing gift for description, and the plot hurdles along nicely. Like Mists of Avalon, what we have here is a historical romance. Original, but a romance just the same. The one little thing that sort of bugs me is the reduction of literary myths to literal novel. The women's perspective of life at that time is fascinating and probably some what accurate; however, the story of Troy and it's characters, like that of Camelot, is really symbolic in nature and is not meant to be taken as literal truth. By stripping Kassandara of her maddness, by making Akhilles a whiney little brat, etc., etc., they are no longer archetypal figures. I realize this is part of the appeal of this novel, and of Mists. It appeals to me too, up to a point. I just find the characterization of the people a little boring after a while; men are awful brutes or good, sensitive males. Women are weak, useless and sensitive, or strong, war loving, and intelligent. That's what I don't get; certain behaviours in men are wrong, but in women the same behaviours are admirable. On the other side, softness in men is desirable, but in women it's a sign of foolishness. It all just gets too predictable. That being said, it is a good read

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful book!
Review: This was a romantic, exciting and compelling book. I recomend it big time

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Trojan War, with a twist.
Review: Don't let Zimmer Bradley's use of the non-standard spelling "Kassandra" scare you away from reading this book. It merely serves as a clue that this will be a spirited retelling of a classic tale.

This utterly absorbing story refocuses theTrojan War through the eyes of the young princess of Troy as she grows up in a female-empowered land recently mastered by men. Her mother's generation of ruling Queens relinquishes power to their consorts and self-styled "Kings" as the book begins. This exchange of power mirrors the more violent one that will be effected when the famous war is over. This Kassandra is much more than a prophetess forever cursed to "speak the truth but never be believed" - she is a girl-woman learning that miracles take work, that education, power, and strength go hand-in-hand to make a leader, and that gender roles are complicated indeed.

If you'd prefer to ignore the philosophies that Zimmer Bradley is projecting, then read "The Firebrand" for the journey of a young girl in a world full of vengeful goddesses and gods, and the life of the fascinating heroine she becomes, one who rarely fails to take her fate into her own hands

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: True MZB genius!
Review: This is a very good historical fantasy, one of Bradley's best, though not quite as good as The Mists of Avalon (I don't think she could EVER top that one!), still an amazing and engaging read. This was the first thing I read by Bradley, so I didn't have any preconceptions, and she just blew me away. Her talent for creating believable characters is prevailent here (a la Mists of Avalon). I found myself empathising with the heroine Kassandra, cheering for her and, at times, hating her and bashing the book against my leg hollering about what an idiot she was. (Getting this sort of reaction from me is the mark of whether or not I care about the characters, and thus, whether or not the author can write.) The minor characters, as well, did not have the feel of cliches and stock characters as so often happens with a character who only has three lines; no, Bradley actually had me wishing to learn more about them. And the plot was fascinating--I'm one of those people who love reading specualtions on "lost cultures", such as Troy. Not your ususal historical fiction, but carefully researched and done with a different spin than the ususal interpretation. I believe that anyone who enjoys good culturebuilding and characterization will fall for this book the way I did--and if Mists of Avalon was one of your favorites, be sure to pick up The Firebrand

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Weaker than Mists of Avalon, but still a good read
Review: I was honestly surprised that this book was written *after* "The Mists of Avalon," regarded by many as Bradley's best work. While "The Firebrand" has many things in common with the earlier book, there are also certain elements that lack.

In general, it was much more difficult to get caught up in the story; I had a sense of having read this story before, and in fact the plotline and characters are so similar to "Mists" that it felt almost like a rehash. While Bradley has a point to make, and makes it well, I could not get as interested in Kassandra's tale as in Morgaine's. The odd thing is that if I had read "Firebrand" first, I probably would not have this opinion.

Still, this is not by any means a bad book. Bradley plunges us into a world where divine interference with human existence, and prophecy spoken at the dinner table, are part of everyday life; where war holds the same entertainment value as television does for us today.

This is not quite a timeless story; in comparing this book and Sheri S. Tepper's most recent work, "Gibbon's Decline and Fall," we can see how the genre of fantasy as written by women has changed over the last 10-20 years. Still, I had trouble putting this book down, a quality of Bradley's work that I have enjoyed for years

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: WOW, If only the women had been in control.
Review: Marion Zimmer Bradley does it again. This "historical" novel tells the story of the Trojan war and the inevitable fall of Troy. As in the Mists of Avalon, Zimmer Bradley tells the story from a women's perspective. Kassandra, who prophetized the fall of Troy is the principal in this wonderful story and you'll wish that she had been ruling Troy. You'll be sorry when you finish this book. But rejoice, because Marion Zimmer Bradley is a prolific author.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Trojan War, with a twist.
Review: Don't let Zimmer Bradley's use of the non-standard spelling "Kassandra" scare you away from reading this book. It merely serves as a clue that this will be a spirited retelling of a classic tale.

This utterly absorbing story refocuses theTrojan War through the eyes of the young princess of Troy as she grows up in a female-empowered land recently mastered by men. Her mother's generation of ruling Queens relinquishes power to their consorts and self-styled "Kings" as the book begins. This exchange of power mirrors the more violent one that will be effected when the famous war is over. This Kassandra is much more than a prophetess forever cursed to "speak the truth but never be believed" - she is a girl-woman learning that miracles take work, that education, power, and strength go hand-in-hand to make a leader, and that gender roles are complicated indeed.

If you'd prefer to ignore the philosophies that Zimmer Bradley is projecting, then read "The Firebrand" for the journey of a young girl in a world full of vengeful goddesses and gods, and the life of the fascinating heroine she becomes, one who rarely fails to take her fate into her own hands


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