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Mass Market Paperback A Midsummer Tempest Book

ISBN: 0345274520

ISBN13: 9780345274526

A Midsummer Tempest

(Book #3 in the Operation Otherworld Series)

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Good

$5.69
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4 ratings

Where Shakespeare is *THE* Historian

Imagine a world where Hamlet, Macbeth, King Lear, Falstaff, Othello, Romeo and Juliet actually lived. Where cannon existed in Hamlet's time and striking clocks in Julius Caesar's. Where Richard III was a hunchbacked monster, Bohemia once had a seacoast, and witchcraft works. Where fairies and elves exist. Where "English folk...in character and speech...[existed] before the walls of Troy, in Theseus' Athens, in Rome and later Italy, in Denmark...[having] spread out north from some old southern land..." And where the chronicle of that spread is told by a man called The Historian--William Shakespeare of Stratford-on-Avon. Such is the world imagined by Poul Anderson in this splendid, magical, swashbuckling tale. The scene is England, and the Cromwellian revolt against King Charles I (or, as the Puritans claim, his bad councillors) is raging. Among the best cavalry commanders in the Royalist force is Prince Rupert of the Rhine, the King's nephew--until he's captured at the Battle of Marston Moor and taken to the home of a Puritan knight, Sir Malachi Shelgrave. There he meets his captor's niece, Jennifer Alayne, and there he is delivered from captivity by her and his loyal Somersetshire sergeant, Will Fairweather. For in a world where locomotives and smoking factories already blight the face of England, King Oberon and Queen Titania of the Faerie realm have a job for him to do, a task that will not only determine which cause triumphs but may mean the continued existence of all that is supernatural. Anderson is best known as a writer of sf, often set on distant planets inhabited by splendidly imaged alien races (read his Fire Time for a prime example); his fantasies are few (this one, HROLF KRAKI'S SAGA - Ballantine Adult Fantasy Series, and The Broken Sword (Fantasy Masterworks) are the chief ones), but coming as he did from the bardic tradition of Scandinavia, his gift was natural and is plainly marked here. The basic premise is intriguing and well worked out, the characters are distinctive and delightful (from gangly Will Fairweather to the "airy sprite" Ariel to the "maundering" Puritans and the loyal, loving Jennifer), and if you try reading some of the dialogue out loud to yourself, you'll realize that a good deal of it is written in blank verse! (And after all, if you think about it, if Shakespeare was reporting both events and speech exactly as they occurred, how else *would* people speak in his world?) There's even a brief appearance by that famous Gascon, D'Artagnan, of Dumas's The Three Musketeers (Signet Classics), very possibly with Queen Anne's diamond studs in his pocket. I've loved Anderson's work since I first discovered it in the early '70's, and this is among my favorites of his novels. If you're looking for a very different kind of alternate-world fantasy filled with intrigue, action, singing language, and unforgettable characters, this is a book you mustn't neglect to read.

A classic that any fan of Anderson or Shakespeare will love

This is one of those books you want to keep and read again over the years. It's a historical what if? story. What if there was a world where Shakespeare's stories were history rather than fiction and in this world railroads were built 200 years early? It's a wonderful story with all the elements of fantasy of Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Night's Dream" combined with the battle between Royalists and Roundheads in a world of premature steam industry. The only thing that would be more wonderful would be if it were twice as long! This is a book you can read today and it is still as great as when it was written.

A tour de force

This story is truly one-of-a-kind; a labor of love (being dedicated to the author's wife) as well as a tour de force. It can be savored on four levels: first as "simply" a fine and original fantasy novel; second as a clever and "natural" (that is, unforced) interweaving of characters and locales from Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream and The Tempest, with a light seasoning of Arthurian themes; thirdly as a masterful adaptation of the language rhythms of a Shakespeare play (with the chapters/acts divided into "scenes"); and finally as an extraordinary, subtle (that is, unobtrusive) integration of poetry (again a la Shakespeare) into prose narative. For example, chapters or "scenes" occasionally end with a rhymed couplet, but that is only the most obvious of the many Excellencies. All four levels are seamlessly incorporated in a most extraordinary manner. The first time I read this book - in 1974 - I was halfway through before I began to realize what the author had achieved. Thus lovers of fantasy can thoroughly enjoy the story, while connoisseurs of the English language will find additional reasons to rejoice. This book is a gem - a masterpiece. I have treasured my paperback copy for 27 years. I assume it is reprinted regularly, but I have never seen it again in bookstores. It deserves a fine hardcover "limited" edition with illuminated script highlights and four-color illustrations by a top artist sympathetic to the genre. I plan to commission one as soon as I win the power ball.

Absolutely superb! Deserves more than 5 stars!!!!!!

I am sometimes sorry I cannot give less than one star to some books I have read (I read hundreds of books professionally). On this occasion I am sorry I cannot give more than five stars.It is absolutely superb, a perfect jewel of a book which I had never heard of and discovered only by chance. The heroic scale and width of concept, and I say this with all seriousness, can be called Shakespearean. Splendid descriptive writing, action and characters, with resonances at the very centre of great mytho-poetry. I knew Poul Anderson was a great writer, but this took my breath away! The best novel I have discovered in years!
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