The Pillars of the Earth Author: Ken Follett | Language: English | ISBN: 
0143142380 | Format: PDF
The Pillars of the Earth    Description
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 A spellbinding epic tale of ambition, anarchy, and absolute power set against the sprawling medieval canvas of twelfth-century England, this is Ken Follett's historical masterpiece.
 Abridged edition read by Richard E. Grant
 - Audio CD
 - Publisher: Penguin Audio; Abridged edition (October 9, 2007)
 - Language: English
 - ISBN-10: 0143142380
 - ISBN-13: 978-0143142386
 -  Product Dimensions:  5.9 x 5.2 x 1.6 inches 
 - Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
 
I actually listened to this book on tape, while my wife read the paperback.  Both of us loved it.  I not only recommend the book, but also urge people to rent the Book on Tape version, narrated by David Case, whose acting and narrative talents shine through, bringing the various characters  to life.  (But still purchase the book from Amazon!) I came to Pillars of  the Earth after spending about two solid years reading, in my spare time,  nothing but medieval histories, with a focus on fourteenth century England  and the Plantagenet kings.  I had never before read a book by Follett, who  I had assumed mass-produced pulp spy fiction.  I only chose the book  because of of my interest in medieval history.  To my delight and surprise,  I discovered the book to be a true work of literature, which might well  still be read in 100 years.  I found myself amazed by Follett's ability to  create an extremely complex and compelling plot, with compelling  characters, against a backdrop that seemed true to the histories I had been  reading.  The early twelfth century is a period neglected by us moderns;  but it's one that's inherently interesting.  Who, today, has even heard of  King Stephen (who preceded the famous Henry II, immortalized twice by Peter  O'Toole in the 1960s movies Beckett and Lion in Winter)?  Because, in  England at least, Stephen's reign was a time of virtual anarchy, Follett  was able to use the period to create characters who demonstrate the brutal  lengths to which people can go when unconstrained by law and an effective  legal order.
This book was highly recommended by the owner of the bookstore I frequent. Another customer noticed I was holding it in my hand indecisively and  declared it was the best book she'd ever read. On the strength of these  recommendations, I bought it for my vacation reading. It was a good read,  but I had higher expectations of it than it delivered. I must disagree with  those who have reviewed this book and called it "an epic". It's  not an epic--it's just a long book.  It has more similarities to a t.v.  mini-series than to the epic tradition.  I will forgive any number of  transgressions in your average 300-page murder mystery, but given that  "Pillars" is 983 pages long,I expected "more bang for my  book", to pervert the idiom. I wanted to learn things that I didn't  know before.
The first few hundred pages are quite well written.  Follett's writing flags toward the middle (but by then, I was two days into  the book, and it was raining at the cottage, so I continued reading). The  problem, I think, is that we are to believe that this is a mostly  historically accurate portrayal of daily life in the Middle Ages. Follett  even thanks several people at the end of the book for assisting him with  their "encyclopedic knowledge of the Middle Ages".  In my  opinion, if an author is going to go to that much effort for historical  accuracy, he can't marry it up with sentences such as: "They looked  fascinated: they had probably never seen a woman done by two men at the  same time". There are parts of the book where the reader is brought up  short by Follett's lapse into lurid prose and it is all of a sudden unclear  whether one is reading a historical novel or a Harlequin romance.
The Pillars of the Earth    Preview
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