About this item
Highlights
- "ACTION-PACKED ADEVNTURE.
- Author(s): Stephen R Lawhead
- 656 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Christian
- Series Name: Celtic Crusades
Description
About the Book
Scotland, 1095. While his father and brothers follow Pope Urban II's call to win Jerusalem from the infidels, Murdo Ranulfson stays behind to guard is family's interests. When his home is confiscated by greedy usurpers, Murdo is forced to follow the Crusades himself. Amidst brutality and ambition, Murdo discovers what he seeks and obtains a relic that will guide him and his descendants for centuries.Book Synopsis
"ACTION-PACKED ADEVNTURE."
--Booklist
Scotland, 1095. While his father and brothers follow Pope Urban II's call to win Jerusalem from the infidels, Murdo Ranulfson stays behind to guard his family's interests. But when his home is confiscated by greedy usurpers, Murdo is forced to follow the Crusades himself. Hoping to find his father and redeem his family's land, Murdo sets off on a journey that leads him to the Mediterranean--the heart of civilization now threatened by barbarian hordes--and on to the fabled city of Constantinople and beyond, to the Holy Land. Amidst brutality and ambition, Murdo discovers what he seeks--and obtains a relic that will guide him and his descendants for centuries.
Rich in heroism, treachery, and adventure, The Iron Lance begins an epic trilogy of Scottish noble family fighting for its existence and its faith during the age of the Crusades--and of a secret society whose ceremonies will shape history for a millennium.
"INTRIGUING . . . STEEPED IN HISTORICAL DETAIL . . ."
--Library Journal
From the Back Cover
In book one of the Celtic Crusades series, a Scottish boy travels to Jerusalem to try to regain his family's stolen lands, and ends up saving the relic Iron Lance that pierced Christ's side.
Review Quotes
"Action-packed adventure...Lawhead knows how to spin a tale."-- "Booklist""Intriguing...steeped in historical detail...should appeal to Lawhead's growing audience."-- "Library Journal""An absorbing saga" --"Time Out (UK) ""Powerful and deeply moving... An engrossing read" --"Starburst ""An enjoyable read" --"SFX (UK)""Here, in the story of a great gift and an even greater journey, is summoned all the magic and splendor, the brutality and the innocence of a lost era the not-so-Dark Age when faith ruled men's hearts." --"Smash ""Engrossing, with plenty of plot twists. . . . Worthwhile for Lawhead regulars and historical-fantasy fans alike." --"Kirkus Reviews ""Not merely a gripping yarn and it certainly is that this is also a novel about faith and the tests life plants in its way. Lawhead, author of the popular Pendragon cycle of fantasies, here makes a sure move into mainstream historical fiction." -"-Booklist ""This is a rip-roaring adventure story; the pace rarely flags. There's scheming, murder and betrayal aplenty." --"Interzone Magazine "Historical fantasy and first of a generational epic, '' so the publisher informs us, from Lawhead (Byzantium,1996, etc.), etc. Things get off to a poor start as Lawhead employs a trite, clumsy framing device. In 1899 Scotland, lawyer and member of a mystical secret society Gordon Murray is proposed for initiation to a higher degree. He accepts the test, and soconfused, drugged, and lowered into a lightless cavernhe stumbles upon the weapon of the title. Touching its cold pitted iron grants Murray visions of the distant past.
There, in the late 11th century, young Murdo, son of Lord Ranulf of Dyrness, Orkney, must stay at home and mind the storewhile his father and brothers march off to join what will become the first Crusade. But soon the king of Norway's lackey Orin Broadfoot (with the collusion of the Church) dispossesses Murdo of his estate, then hastily disappears to join the Crusade himself, before Murdo can remonstrate with him. Murdo vows to follow Orin and force him to make amends, and pledges to return to his beloved Ragna.
Meanwhile, another narrative strand details the doings of the Byzantine Emperor, Alexius I, who, having requested warriors from northern Europe to fight the Turks, receives instead a peasant rabble headed by Peter the Hermit. These sections merely reiterate the progress of the Crusade, treading the same ground as Susan Shwartz's Crescent and Cross (1997). Eventually, we learn of Murdo's exertions, the fate of lawyer Murray, and the identity of the weapon that inspired the whole business. Familiar fare for Lawhead fans, watery gruel for outsiders or newcomers. --"Kirkus Reviews"