Sword of attila | The Sword of Attila: A Novel of the Last Years of Rome | Michael Curtis Ford
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The Sword of Attila: A Novel of the Last Years of Rome
Michael Curtis Ford
St. Martin's Paperbacks
, 2006 - 432 pages
average customer review:
based on 23 reviews
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highly recommended
A Fun Read
This book is a historical fiction. I personally don't ever put to much weight into the facts of these books, but I do enjoy the historical settings. The book is a fun light read about the Romans and the Huns. If you don't put too much weight on the "fact" and just look at it as a fun story then you should enjoy this book. Personally I will read another of this author's books.
It's Called Historical FICTION For A Reason
I can't believe all of the negative comments directed at this fine
novel
by people decrying it's lack of historical authenticity. What ever happened to the idea of "artistic license"? If a reader is desiring truthful history, I'd suggest that they look in the Non-Fiction section instead of the Fiction section. This book can and should be enjoyed for what it is instead of what it is not. I've read numerous such books by different authors and Mr. Ford is as good or better than any. His characters are well developed and interesting. His description of ancient warfare is so vivid that you can almost smell the blood and hear the anguished cries of the wounded. I can't speak for the historical accuracy of his words, but neither will I judge the novel by it. I can say that if you're looking for a great read that will keep you up late at night turning pages, you can't miss with this one. Enjoy the ride.
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Sword of attila
If you like history you will like this book.
Not the best but by far not the worst . Glad I bought the book
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the sword of atilla by michael curtis ford
this book is well written and very historical and also just a very good story of the life of
attila
the hun from his younger
years
on up.michael curtis ford lets you see the country he is writing about thru the eyes of the people there at the time. if you like ancient roman history, this is a great book.
Ford sets up fantastic tableau, but novel cuts short too many elements
Michael Curtis Ford continues to add to his solid body of historical fiction set in the ancient world. "The
Sword
of
Attila
" follows three other
novel
s set during various critical periods or episodes of the ancient world. This time, Ford could not have picked a more epic subject - the rise of Attila the Hun and his infamous march against
Rome
.
Unfortunately, with this subject Ford has bitten off more than he can chew in a mere 330-odd pages. The novel opens at night during a brief respite in the legendary Battle of Chalons, but quickly whisks the reader back to the childhood of Attila and a promising young Roman, Flavius Aetius. Ford struggles mightily to create a powerful bond between these two young men as Attila is sent to Ravenna as a hostage shortly before Aetius is sent to live among the Huns. Ford tries to build the novel into a clash of two great friends as well as two civilizations, but all in all it just doesn't work. Aetius and Attila do not have the same relationship as Caesar and Brutus - there is no great bond and there is no great betrayal. This element of the novel just rings hollow.
Ford also tries to inject a bit too much into the novel. We see a bit of the imperial skullduggery from "I, Claudius," but it is so cursory that we eagerly wish to move on to more enjoyable items. Ford also creates dozens of interesting minor characters, but they pop up for brief moments and then are ignored for chapters at a time . . . often appearing with little or no import.
These are fair criticisms of Ford's work - the scope of the book was too small for his plot. I believe that this would have made a fantastic trilogy for Ford, or perhaps a 750-page epic. But the novel just feels truncated. Other novelists have taken on the ancient world and taken a much tighter focus, and their novels are stronger - see Steven Pressfield. Others simply acknowledge that more pages are required, such as Colleen McCullough, Conn Iggulden, and Mary Renault.
But it is undeniable that Ford's novel has several elements that work. He has done a great job reconstructing a plausible culture for the Huns - of which we know virtually nothing. Ford also has a gift for writing vast scenes showing the Huns marching through the forests of Germany or storming entrenched fortifications. There are several passages that sing.
But ultimately, "Sword of Attila" is unsatisfying. Ford has given us a glimpse of two amazing characters - Attila and Aetius - but an unsatisfying glimpse. While it's true that you "always leave 'em wanting more," we want too much more after finishing this book.
I am intrigued that Ford will soon have published a sequel of sorts to this novel, and based on the strong elements of "Sword of Attila," I will check it out.
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For centuries,
Rome
had ruled from Africa to the wilds of Britain. Now, from across a broad plain of waving grass, a new enemy had poured out of the East?to be led by a man whose goal was not just victory in battle, but the end of an empire...
In his
novel
s of ancient warfare, Michael Curtis Ford captures the roar, clamor and horror of battle as well as the intimate moments of human choice upon which history turns. In his extraordinary new work, he brings to life the buckling Roman empire in 400 A.D., a jagged, sprawling realm of foreign fighters, unstable rulers, and battle lines stretched too far. At this pivotal moment, General Flavius Aetius is forced into a battle he does not want but cannot afford to lose. Once Flavius lived among the wild Huns, rode their stout warhorses and became like a son to their king. Now, he faces a man who once saved his life, a man he fears, loves and admires... a man named
Attila
?the most dangerous enemy Rome has ever known....
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