I read Conn Iggulden's Genghis Khan series and loved it. The Abbot's Tale is a new novel set in Anglo-Saxon England in the year 937. It is a stand alone novel.
Dunstan and his brother Wulfric are placed in Glastonbury Abbey as youths by their father so that Dunstan can recover from an illness. Their father soon dies and their mother is put out of the family home by an older stepbrother but funds are available for them to stay at the Abbey. They want to leave for they suffer frequent beatings and hate the monastic life but there is no where for them to go. Dunstan eventually becomes a priest and after claiming to have been rescued by an angel from a tower scaffold he adds to his story by saying that he had a vision of a grand cathedral. King Aethelstan believes these stories and makes him the Abbot of Glastonbury. From here Dunstan begins his lifetime of service to seven kings, all descendants of Aethelstan. His tale includes his participation in wars, exile to Ghent, traveling to Rome to meet Pope John XII, being named Archbishop of Canterbury and building a cathedral in Canterbury.
While Dunstan had quite the career, I was not as enamored with this book as I was with the Khan series. I thought that parts of the story were paced a little slow. However, the author did show the reality of life in the 10th century which could be quite cruel for those living during that era. That said, the book is an epic story full of royal kings, cathedral building, Viking invasions, and war scenes that show the birth of the English nation.
I guess my disappointment with The Abbot's Tale is due to how much I loved the Genghis Khan series. It did not measure up to the Khan books. Perhaps that is not a fair assessment but I was expecting more from the book. Note that the author found a manuscript that was never intended to be read and needed to be translated. It had gaps in its plot. The author filled in these gaps with his own writing, added chapter headings and it became The Abbot's Tale. He stated "It is my hope that the result gives some pleasure and casts light on an exceptional mind of the tenth century." Whoever wrote the manuscript did have a great imagination. Of that, there is no doubt. He created a vivid character in Dunstan and gave him a fantastical life. Due to the pacing, I could not stay interested in the story.
Dunstan and his brother Wulfric are placed in Glastonbury Abbey as youths by their father so that Dunstan can recover from an illness. Their father soon dies and their mother is put out of the family home by an older stepbrother but funds are available for them to stay at the Abbey. They want to leave for they suffer frequent beatings and hate the monastic life but there is no where for them to go. Dunstan eventually becomes a priest and after claiming to have been rescued by an angel from a tower scaffold he adds to his story by saying that he had a vision of a grand cathedral. King Aethelstan believes these stories and makes him the Abbot of Glastonbury. From here Dunstan begins his lifetime of service to seven kings, all descendants of Aethelstan. His tale includes his participation in wars, exile to Ghent, traveling to Rome to meet Pope John XII, being named Archbishop of Canterbury and building a cathedral in Canterbury.
While Dunstan had quite the career, I was not as enamored with this book as I was with the Khan series. I thought that parts of the story were paced a little slow. However, the author did show the reality of life in the 10th century which could be quite cruel for those living during that era. That said, the book is an epic story full of royal kings, cathedral building, Viking invasions, and war scenes that show the birth of the English nation.
I guess my disappointment with The Abbot's Tale is due to how much I loved the Genghis Khan series. It did not measure up to the Khan books. Perhaps that is not a fair assessment but I was expecting more from the book. Note that the author found a manuscript that was never intended to be read and needed to be translated. It had gaps in its plot. The author filled in these gaps with his own writing, added chapter headings and it became The Abbot's Tale. He stated "It is my hope that the result gives some pleasure and casts light on an exceptional mind of the tenth century." Whoever wrote the manuscript did have a great imagination. Of that, there is no doubt. He created a vivid character in Dunstan and gave him a fantastical life. Due to the pacing, I could not stay interested in the story.
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