Rating: Summary: A close encounter of serious and science fiction Review: A "star" falls from the sky near Quintas in Portugal during the days of the Inquisition and the town is shaken by rumours of miracles and an outbreak of blatant heresy---all of which we folk of the 20th century might instead leap to interpret in terms of a clash between modern science and our own popular UFO mythology, although of course our theologians and politicians would also find plenty to say. Likewise, Quintas becomes the focus of an urgent Holy Office investigation conducted by an incompatible, bickering team of harassed priests and secular lawyers whose views range from the skeptical to the credulous, the politically expedient to the mystical. The mentally retarded, adolescent King Afonso sets up camp near the fallen "acorn", convinced by telepathic dialogue with the damaged space-vessel's failing computer that God is granting him personal revelations about the nature of the universe. While the confused young king shocks the assembled clergy with his Galilean heresies, including a quaint though accurate (according to current astronomical tenets) description of the formation of the solar system, his brother Pedro mounts an efficient political coup and wrests the regency from Count Castelo Melhor. And two silent, passive, enigmatic aliens docilely allow themselves to be imprisoned, gazing upon their captors with huge, unfathomable black eyes. Imps, demons, angels, pygmies from Africa or Borneo, strange New World animals "catapulted" into Portugal by the Spanish foe in a fiendish plot to sow civil disorder?Anthony's ruthless and provocative account of the imaginary happening provides a lucid demonstration of how the unprecedented and the mysterious can only be analyzed and (mis)understood in terms of the prevailing beliefs of the time---its religious and philosophical convictions, the state of its scientific knowledge, its political prejudices, its popular myths and superstitions. But this is also a novel of great humanity, with a cast of well-drawn, sympathetic, and lifelike characters whose interplay is both tragic and exalting: the soul-searching Jesuit Manoel Pessoa, a rationalist without faith, who hopes at first to defuse the dangerous situation with a cursory proforma inquiry sparing the Quintans dire consequences; his lover Berenice, a herbalist of Jewish origin, who cures the town's sick and is shunned as a witch; the kindly old Franciscan Soares, who believes in the angels; the selfish and gluttonous Inquisitor-General Gomes, who overrides the tribunal with his authority to light the pyres; the tense mystic Bernardo; the enchantingly quixotic King Afonso. "God's Fires" is a story of passion and doomed lives written with insight, biting humour, and bitterness---a far larger book than its disguising science-fiction component would immediately suggest.
Rating: Summary: A close encounter of serious and science fiction Review: A "star" falls from the sky near Quintas in Portugal during the days of the Inquisition and the town is shaken by rumours of miracles and an outbreak of blatant heresy---all of which we folk of the 20th century might instead leap to interpret in terms of a clash between modern science and our own popular UFO mythology, although of course our theologians and politicians would also find plenty to say. Likewise, Quintas becomes the focus of an urgent Holy Office investigation conducted by an incompatible, bickering team of harassed priests and secular lawyers whose views range from the skeptical to the credulous, the politically expedient to the mystical. The mentally retarded, adolescent King Afonso sets up camp near the fallen "acorn", convinced by telepathic dialogue with the damaged space-vessel's failing computer that God is granting him personal revelations about the nature of the universe. While the confused young king shocks the assembled clergy with his Galilean heresies, including a quaint though accurate (according to current astronomical tenets) description of the formation of the solar system, his brother Pedro mounts an efficient political coup and wrests the regency from Count Castelo Melhor. And two silent, passive, enigmatic aliens docilely allow themselves to be imprisoned, gazing upon their captors with huge, unfathomable black eyes. Imps, demons, angels, pygmies from Africa or Borneo, strange New World animals "catapulted" into Portugal by the Spanish foe in a fiendish plot to sow civil disorder? Anthony's ruthless and provocative account of the imaginary happening provides a lucid demonstration of how the unprecedented and the mysterious can only be analyzed and (mis)understood in terms of the prevailing beliefs of the time---its religious and philosophical convictions, the state of its scientific knowledge, its political prejudices, its popular myths and superstitions. But this is also a novel of great humanity, with a cast of well-drawn, sympathetic, and lifelike characters whose interplay is both tragic and exalting: the soul-searching Jesuit Manoel Pessoa, a rationalist without faith, who hopes at first to defuse the dangerous situation with a cursory proforma inquiry sparing the Quintans dire consequences; his lover Berenice, a herbalist of Jewish origin, who cures the town's sick and is shunned as a witch; the kindly old Franciscan Soares, who believes in the angels; the selfish and gluttonous Inquisitor-General Gomes, who overrides the tribunal with his authority to light the pyres; the tense mystic Bernardo; the enchantingly quixotic King Afonso. "God's Fires" is a story of passion and doomed lives written with insight, biting humour, and bitterness---a far larger book than its disguising science-fiction component would immediately suggest.
Rating: Summary: Another wonderful work by Patricia Anthony Review: After reading "Flanders" by Patricia Anthony, and loving it, I decided to read another of her books, and "God's Fires" was the one I found at the bookstore. The decision to purchase it is one that I will not regret, for it is a wonderful, and well-written, work of fiction. The year is 1662, and a feeble-minded but good-natured teenager reigns in Portugal, but the Inquisition actually rules. In a remote village strange sights appear, and an "acorn" crashes to earth, leaving two live, and one dead, "creatures". But what exactly are these beings, and what about the other signs and wonders appearing in the area? The Holy Office of the Church will get to the bottom of the mystery, or people will burn. This book shows the fine line between faith and fanaticism, courage and foolishness, and love and lust. The language is all that I had expected from the author of "Flanders", and the pure emotion of this book practically leaps off of the page at you. The Church, and certain clergymen, do not fare well in their portrayal, but then, the Church has much to apologise for concerning the Inquisition. As I said when I reviewed "Flanders", read this book!
Rating: Summary: Another wonderful work by Patricia Anthony Review: After reading "Flanders" by Patricia Anthony, and loving it, I decided to read another of her books, and "God's Fires" was the one I found at the bookstore. The decision to purchase it is one that I will not regret, for it is a wonderful, and well-written, work of fiction. The year is 1662, and a feeble-minded but good-natured teenager reigns in Portugal, but the Inquisition actually rules. In a remote village strange sights appear, and an "acorn" crashes to earth, leaving two live, and one dead, "creatures". But what exactly are these beings, and what about the other signs and wonders appearing in the area? The Holy Office of the Church will get to the bottom of the mystery, or people will burn. This book shows the fine line between faith and fanaticism, courage and foolishness, and love and lust. The language is all that I had expected from the author of "Flanders", and the pure emotion of this book practically leaps off of the page at you. The Church, and certain clergymen, do not fare well in their portrayal, but then, the Church has much to apologise for concerning the Inquisition. As I said when I reviewed "Flanders", read this book!
Rating: Summary: Involved! Review: God's fires reads like an historical novel. The language is dramatic and poetic revealing deep and full emotion and the true ravages of life.Characters are well developed...personally I ignored all of the sci fi elements and regarded them as devices to keep the authour from developing the characters and the plot in an even deeper way which was okay because it was very involved.
Rating: Summary: A look at Catholic religion when confronted with a miracle Review: In reading this book I was struke with how much societies in Europe were bounded by the Catholic Church. No where did Rome hold more sway than in Spain and Portugal. The Inquisition stayed in business there until well into the 1800's. The problem the Portugese faced had to do with winning their freedom from Spain and trying to re-establish their dominate culture. The story opens six years after Portugese separtation from Spain. Into this turmoil drops a spaceship. The computer onboard can speak to minds, but has been severely damaged. The aliens onboard have visited this small Portugese town before and raped some of the women. Or so it looks like. It could be atrificial incemination. It is never clear. The King of Portugal at the time is retarded and childlike in his twenties. He sees the "acorn" fall and goes to see the wonder. He finds one of the aliens dead and two others unable to speak. At the same time you find a circuit riding Inquisition Officer trying to keep the people in the villiage from being burned as heritics. The king says something to the effect that Galileo was correct and the Earth goes around the sun. This causes a high official from the Inquisition to hurry to the villiage to stamp on the king. This is a Tragedy. Yet it reveals how people looked at the world up until just recently. The conflict here is between the Rule of Law, the power of unrestrained heirarchies, the Rule of Whim, and the Rule of the Church.
Rating: Summary: A NOVEL ABOUT FAITH, WITH AN ABSOLUTELY DEVISTATING ENDING. Review: SYNOPSIS:
For an inquisitor, Manoel Pessoa is remarkably good-natured. He is dangerously apostate for a Jesuit, too--a true Renaissance man. He arrives at the village of Quintas and is amused to hear news of signs in the sky and visions of Mary. A pity. For a man with two law degrees, Pessoa can be remarkably dense. When the townsfolk insist that a virgin has been gotten with child, Pessoa's amusement turns to horror. This is deadly gossip indeed, and Pessoa must put an end to it before word of the heresy reaches the Holy Office. But a strange acorn is fallen, one which has birthed 3 mute creatures. Are they New World animals? Are they imps, as the villagers suspect? Or are they angels? Portugal's young and simple minded king has come to see the wonder; and there within the fallen acorn he meets and talks with God. On the heels of the king follow the politically-savvy Inquisitor General and his state executioners. Monsignor intends to put a halt to this lunacy and, at whatever cost, protect the interests of the Church. Two young girls and a matron are tried for their heresy; a war hero and Pessoa's own lover with them. Will the captured angels and these innocents perish in Monsignor's misguided auto-da-fe? The only salvation for them is faith. And that is a commodity of which Pessoa has so very, very little. THIS NOVEL HAS MADE EVEN EDITORS AND AGENTS WEEP. IT IS MY FINEST BOOK TO DATE.
Rating: Summary: Powerful, wrenching. Without a doubt my finest book to date. Review: The act of writing distances the writer. It must, if we are to control our craft. However, when I wrote the final paragraph of the penultimate chapter of this book, the paragraph which begins, "Faith was not about the comfort of holding..." I panicked for some reason, and had to get up and away from the computer. Only later did I realize that the emotional power of the scene I had just written was so overwhelming that it frightened me. I have now heard back from some of those who have read the manuscript and some who have read the galleys, and I have been glad to see that the novel has made even long-time professional agents and editors sob. In the process of final edits, as I was reading the book through for what must have been the thousanth time, I reached that penultimate chapter, broke into tears, and had to stop editing for a while. A bit of a bother, actually, but I was delighted to see that the novel's emotional resonance has such staying power. God's Fires is a novel about faith. And faith is sometimes hard. This book marks a change in direction for me, from s.f. thrillers to historical speculative works. In God's Fires I still explore man's contact with the unknown, but this novel is much more. The story is more linear and (I think) more approachable. I am not accustomed to hawking my novels, but I am urging any mainstream fiction reader (whether or not you care for historicals or s.f.) to read this book
Rating: Summary: Original, imaginative, pleasant, thougtful, with end shock. Review: The story is excellent. The irony and criticism on the Catholic Church is accurate and poignant.
The cruelty of the ending seems to me not in line with the earlier chapters. Surprising and almost unbearable.
The book is soiled all along by numerous citations in bad latin and greek. It demands a thourough review and correction. Just accurate copying from a latin missal is all that is needed.
Good translations into Iberian romanesque languages (Portugese, Spanish, Catalan) would be most welcome.
Rating: Summary: Nobody expects the Spanish Insquisition Review: There are many ways through Heaven's Gate. The recent cult occurrence gave many of us pause. What could prompt reasonable people to take faith to such lethal extremes? We seem stymied by the cult phenomenon and yet adhere to the standard religions of our day; belief structures depending on virgin births, celestial rewards, ETERNAL punishments, and the damning of unbaptised infants to limbo. These ideas are orthodox, and therefore not absurd. Beliefs that run counter to our own personal experience of life and the human condition are tolerated in the name of a higher reality.
Patricia Anthony's latest book takes us back to a time where belief was less optional and carried a higher tariff than our current institutions exact. The action takes place in Portugal in the 1600's, when the 2nd most powerful colonizing power in Europe was ruled, by divine right, by Afonso, an idiot. The rest of Europe has undermined the Church as the single arbiter of human intercourse and political power, but the Portuguese aristocracy is still fighting for its piece of the temporal pie. Into this volatile mixture send a parish Inquisitor with a human connection to his flock, a post-Sephardic witch who has died once, a pregnant virgin, a wheel of Fire, and a silver Acorn descending from the heavens to confound the Holy Inquisitor and his cranky bowels.
This is not a happy type of story. In fact, this is a story filled with apprehension, with emphasis on the terror many of us find in dealing with the reality our socieites inflict in the name of orthodoxy, but it is not a tale without hope, or beauty, or triumph of the human spirit.
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