Autorenbild.

Edison Marshall (1894–1967)

Autor von Caravan to Xanadu

67+ Werke 699 Mitglieder 10 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Reihen

Werke von Edison Marshall

Caravan to Xanadu (1953) 91 Exemplare
Yankee Pasha (1947) 75 Exemplare
American Captain (1954) 55 Exemplare
The Viking (1951) 47 Exemplare
The Infinite Woman (1950) 46 Exemplare
The Pagan King (1959) 46 Exemplare
The Lost Land (1966) 30 Exemplare
Gypsy Sixpence (1949) 25 Exemplare
The lost colony (1964) 20 Exemplare
Benjamin Blake (1941) 17 Exemplare
Great Smith (1943) 16 Exemplare
West with the Vikings (1961) 16 Exemplare
The Conqueror (1963) 16 Exemplare
The upstart (1945) 13 Exemplare
The White Brigand (1937) 13 Exemplare
The gentleman (1956) 11 Exemplare
Cortez and Marina (1963) 11 Exemplare
The heart of the hunter (1956) 9 Exemplare
Earth giant (1960) 6 Exemplare
The stolen god 6 Exemplare
The Doctor of Lonesome River (1941) 6 Exemplare
The Snowshoe Trail (1921) 6 Exemplare
The Sky Line of Spruce (1922) 5 Exemplare
The Far Call (1944) 4 Exemplare
Princess Sophia (1960) 4 Exemplare
Bengal tiger : a tale of India (1953) 4 Exemplare
The STRENGTH Of The PINES. (1950) 4 Exemplare
The Deputy at Snow Mountain (1932) 4 Exemplare
Forlorn Island (1932) 3 Exemplare
The Voice of the Pack (1920) 3 Exemplare
The death bell (1924) 3 Exemplare
Love stories of India (1950) 3 Exemplare
The Splendid Quest (1934) 3 Exemplare
The Deadfall 3 Exemplare
Ogden's Strange Story (1934) 3 Exemplare
Sam Campbell, gentleman (1938) 3 Exemplare
The missionary (1943) 3 Exemplare
Yankee Pasha Abridged (1959) 2 Exemplare
Tähdenlento 2 Exemplare
Seward's folly (1924) 2 Exemplare
The Flying Lion 1 Exemplar
Rogue Gentleman (1963) 1 Exemplar
Sabreur 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

The New Junior Classics Volume 09: Sport and Adventure (1938) — Mitwirkender — 171 Exemplare
The Vikings [1958 film] (1958) — Original book — 93 Exemplare
Horrors unknown (1971) — Mitwirkender — 42 Exemplare
Shot in the Dark (1950) — Mitwirkender — 24 Exemplare
O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1919 (1919) — Mitwirkender — 9 Exemplare
Son of Fury [1942 film] (1994) — Original novel — 5 Exemplare
Four in One Mysteries (1924) — Mitwirkender — 5 Exemplare
The Bedside Bonanza (1944) — Mitwirkender — 2 Exemplare
Friends to Man: The Wonderful World of Animals — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Novela de aventuras coloniales que transcurre en la India y donde aparece una de las constantes de este narrador: el mestizaje de su protagonista, lo que origina un conflicto no ya de clase sino racial. El chico, que tiene la mitad de su sangre blanca, quiere ser blanco pese a los obstáculos que le impone la rígida sociedad en la que se desenvuelve.
 
Gekennzeichnet
Natt90 | Nov 15, 2022 |
There was a long, diffuse novel titled "Anthony Adverse", and this is Marshall's attempt to capture the market created by that monster hit. Our hero, Benjamin is the orphaned result of an adultery by a titled Englishman and the wife of a local gunsmith. Benjamin flees his servitude to his wicked uncle and after voyaging to the exotic south seas returns to displace the villain
getting all of the goodies left from his father's life. As escapism, it is adequate, if not very original for the fiction of the time.… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
DinadansFriend | Oct 22, 2021 |
Read a good bit of it before giving up on it.
 
Gekennzeichnet
HenrySt123 | Jul 19, 2021 |
As a long- time Pagan how can I resist a version of the story of King Arthur titled _The Pagan King_ ? Well actually I resisted it for some time. Don't even recall how I acquired it but have been giving it shelf space and moving it for a couple of decades. Finally I read it.

This is not a new book but appears to be one of the earlier efforts (1959) to write a more historically likely story of the legendary King Arthur. While I would agree that this version of the Arthurian myth seems to have more historically accurate detail than the versions based on Mallory's Middle Ages, it does have its problems. Ambrose, who becomes Artay and then Arthur, is a rustic living with the old druid Merdin, a serving woman who never speaks, and Gerald, a 1/4 Roman who teaches him swordsmanship and tactics and eventually becomes his general. Merdin eventually reveals that Ambrose is the son of Vortigern and his first queen, exposed to die by the King's order and rescued by Merdin. When Ambrose fights and wounds his half-brother Mordred at the King's Beltane games, his identity is revealed and he and the household must flee. Ambrose eventually puts together a small band of followers which grows larger as he defeats other rulers and eventually Vortigern. In the meantime, a prophetic song says that he must wed a woman named Wander, but he has fallen in love with Elain of the lake and is bedeviled with lust for Vivain, who claims to be of Witch blood and have prophetic dreams.

The changes that Marshall rings upon the basic Arthurian story are interesting. However his treatment of his pagan characters is uneven. Merdin, for example is called a druid, not a wizard, yet professes admiration for the law and order than the Romans had enforced in Britain. This seems strange given that the Romans banned and massacred the Druids. Merdin seems to feel that he is serving a sacred cause in trying to fulfill the predictions of Arthur's ruler ship, yet he lies and deceives in the furtherance of that cause, which doesn't seem to display much faith in the gods. Artay is also inconsistent. For instance at one point he vows to Elain, in the names of the Great Gods, that he will free 5 prisoners who otherwise would be hanged. But a few pages later he seems to have forgotten this pledge and has to be persuaded by Merdin to free a particular criminal for purely strategic reasons. Another time a character refers to the false gods of the Saxons. Pagans were not generally given to considering the gods of other peoples as false, merely not their gods. The idea of false gods is a Christian one (or Jewish in origin). Why would a Briton accept that he worships Lud and Romans worship Jove, yet regard the Saxon Odin as false? The characters also speak and act as though Christians were rare in Britain, yet the Romans did not leave until some time after Constantine's conversion, so a good number of Romans or Romanized Britons would have been Christians. Many of these details would not be noticed by readers unfamiliar with the history, but they are distracting for those who do.
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
ritaer | 1 weitere Rezension | May 24, 2021 |

Listen

Auszeichnungen

Dir gefällt vielleicht auch

Nahestehende Autoren

Statistikseite

Werke
67
Auch von
10
Mitglieder
699
Beliebtheit
#36,217
Bewertung
½ 3.4
Rezensionen
10
ISBNs
33

Diagramme & Grafiken