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Warrior Queen: The Story of Boudica, Celtic…
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Warrior Queen: The Story of Boudica, Celtic Queen (édition 2005)

par Alan Gold

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1185233,349 (3.04)1
Meticulously researched and imaginatively wrought, Warrior Queen is the sweeping epic of the infamous Boudica who challenged the vicious might of the Roman Empire. In 43 AD Boudica became the queen of a Celtic tribe and a Roman sympathiser. But after years of loyal service she finds herself brutally betrayed. The fury of her unleashed vengeance threw the Roman Empire's forces into chaos and made her a goddess to her own people. Here, Alan Gold retells the story of Boudica in a novel that embraces all the fiery passion and intrigue of this remarkable woman.… (plus d'informations)
Membre:asails
Titre:Warrior Queen: The Story of Boudica, Celtic Queen
Auteurs:Alan Gold
Info:NAL Trade (2005), Edition: First Edition, Paperback, 384 pages
Collections:Votre bibliothèque, En cours de lecture, Liste de livres désirés, À lire, Lus mais non possédés, Favoris
Évaluation:*****
Mots-clés:Aucun

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Warrior Queen: The Story of Boudica, Celtic Queen par Alan Gold

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Meticulously researched and imaginatively wrought, Warrior Queen is the sweeping epic of a flame-haired woman who would dare to challenge the vicious might of the Roman Empire-and whose name would echo throughout history.

In 43 A.D., Boudica became the queen of a Celtic tribe-and a Roman sympathizer. But after years of loyal service to the Empire, she would find herself brutally betrayed. With the conviction of a hero and the courage of a warrior, she united the Celts against their enemy. The fury of her unleashed vengeance threw the Roman forces into chaos, made her a goddess to her own people-and carried her into the history books as a true heroine of the British people.

Now, Alan Gold retells the story of Boudica in a novel that embraces all the fiery passion and intrigue of the Warrior Queen.
  amarynt | Jul 21, 2009 |
About Boudica, the Celtic queen who united the tribes of Britain against the Romans. Really brought the legend to life. ( )
  Darla | Dec 15, 2008 |
This had such potential to be exciting. The Celtic tribes uniting to fight off the repressive Roman regime. One woman with a vendetta and a grasp of Roman tactics leads a massive army against a seasoned Roman general. This is the stuff of high drama, or at least a stirring tragic story. And this really did try. But it failed.

First off the book takes over 250 pages to even get to the incident that transforms Romanized Boudica into the vengeance-driven queen known as Britannia. 250 pages of practically nothing happening. Except for plenty of sex - which is not only plentiful, but unnecessary to the focus of the story. In the first few scenes, for example, Boudica encounters a boy with whom she has a ridiculously stilted conversation about how often she has been 'entered' and he never shows up again.

That's not the only way the story wanders. The story runs through more than its fair share of Roman emperors as well, which certainly adds to the sordid sexual encounters. There seems to be little to no point to these except possibly as comparisons between the scheming Roman women and the more overt strength of Boudica. If that's the case, though, it certainly fails as well.

The good points of this book mostly involved the fight scenes. These were interesting and clever - I enjoyed seeing Boudica portrayed as smart, observant and competent but defeated by the lack of discipline amongst her men. Unfortunately even this is undermined by the 'inspirational speaker' style orations Boudica uses to unite the Celts after years of living fat on the Romans patronage and ignoring the sufferings of other tribes. It just comes off as stilted and cheesy. I certainly wouldn't have followed her into battle.

Bottom line: The idea and the history is fascinating, and there is certainly room for literary license considering how little is known about Boudica. But find a different book about it. And please let me know if it was any good.

Also posted at my blog. ( )
  Caramellunacy | May 29, 2008 |
NIL
  rustyoldboat | May 28, 2011 |
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Meticulously researched and imaginatively wrought, Warrior Queen is the sweeping epic of the infamous Boudica who challenged the vicious might of the Roman Empire. In 43 AD Boudica became the queen of a Celtic tribe and a Roman sympathiser. But after years of loyal service she finds herself brutally betrayed. The fury of her unleashed vengeance threw the Roman Empire's forces into chaos and made her a goddess to her own people. Here, Alan Gold retells the story of Boudica in a novel that embraces all the fiery passion and intrigue of this remarkable woman.

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