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Hardcover A Prisoner of Birth Book

ISBN: 0312379293

ISBN13: 9780312379292

A Prisoner of Birth

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Book Overview

International bestseller and master storyteller Jeffrey Archer is at the very top of his game in a story of fate and fortune, redemption and revenge. If Danny Cartwright had proposed to Beth Wilson the day before, or the day after, he would not have been arrested and charged with the murder of his best friend. But when the four prosecution witnesses are a barrister, a popular actor, an aristocrat, and the youngest partner in an established firm's...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A VERY SATISFYING READ

I have to say that I thoroughly enjoyed every page of this one! Of course I have to admit to being one of those people who feel that the work of Alexandre Dumas in his Count of Monte Cristo is one of the fifty best novels in the English language. This book by author Jeffrey Archer is a wonderful update and take- off from that classic work by Dumas. This novel takes place primarily in England, although does move about a bit later in the book. The plot line has been pretty well covered here by other reviews so I will not dwell on that at length. Suffice to say that we have a poor young man who is set up and framed by four quite wealthy and privileged young men for the crime of murder. Danny, our hero, is an uneducated mechanic who cannot read or write. He is brilliant though, and through a series of fortunate circumstances, ends up sharing a cell with two remarkable individuals who transform Danny's life. Again, the author is sticking to the Dumas work pretty closely. This work is completely filled with twists and turns and just when you think you have if figured out, or that all is lost, the author neatly twirls events and you are off in another direction. The plot is rather complicated but is surprisingly easy to follow as are the well developed characters. This can be and should be classified as a thriller, but it is so much more than that. Archer's knowledge of the legal system and prison life allow the story to be told in a realistic fashion (yes, I admit that the author does stretch a few things here and there, but hey folks, this is a novel meant to entertain, not a T.V. documentary...yawn). This work also takes a close look at the English class system, at its worse and the play between the lower and upper classes of society, i.e. the have and have not's. This is a rather large novel, which in a way is unfortunate, because if you are like me, once you finish the first page or two, you will be hooked and you are going to be there for awhile. Now I fully admit to loving to read a good revenge book and this is one of the best in that genre I have read in quite some time. No spoilers here, I hope, but I found this to be a very satisfying read! Recommend this one highly. If you are into this type of novel, I cannot see how you will not like it. Don Blankenship The Ozarks

Archer's best

Jeffrey Archer said he hoped to write a book better than his first and he succeeded here. As he said in his interview at the end of the audio version of A Prisoner of Birth, in a story of revenge a person has to have a "pot of gold" in order to have the time to spend on a game of revenge. And he wanted to find a very creative way to get Danny out of jail. He was successful on all counts. I'm not sure I believed the prison sections, although Archer insists the content here is based on his personal experience in jail. However, going to jail for perjury and going to jail for murder would put offenders in different cell blocks with different rules, so I think there is not as much of a reality base in those sequences as Archer thinks there is. Nevertheless, he successfully suspends a reader's belief system and weaves a great tale. The end is perfect. He doesn't rush it, which many authors tend to do. Yet he doesn't diminish it with a lot of detail. It's a surprise, yet he foreshadows it very early on in the book. The subtly of the foreshadowing is so good that the reader totally forgets about it. Awesome writing technique. It's one of the best endings to a well crafted story that I've read in a long time. The other reviewers on this book give endless story briefs, so I won't do so myself. But buy it. If you prefer audio, the reader is outstanding. I sat in my garage on many a night coming home from work to see what happened next. Either purchase is well worth your money.

Ken Dowe Reviews Jeffrey Archer's PRISONER OF BIRTH

Here's a book that proves there is good reason Mr. Archer is Great Britain's best selling novelist. What good can come when a Cockney lad shares a pint with his fiance and his best friend in the wrong (posh) end of London inside a pub full of drunken gentry? A few sodden comments, a leer here and there, and his friend lies dead outside the drinking establishment. With enough money, one can avoid the consequences of sin in any court. With power, pounds, and position, the three guilty "gentlemen" can manuever through the English courts with relative ease. The innocent "Danny" loses his lover, his unborn child, and 20+ years of his life. But, education can find its way even through locked cells, if one seeks it. In prison Danny is tutored by a genteel man whose own world has been rocked. Danny becomes a student of protocol. He is taught to dress like, talk like, and becomes even more of a look-a-like of his new friend and mentor. Suddenly, during a prison riot, Danny's soon to be released friend is killed. Fortuitously, (and because it makes for a great story!), Danny is mistakenly identified as his teacher, and summarily released from prison. It this was a great story before, and it was, PRISONER OF BIRTH now goes to max power and soars. Danny, becomes his friend. With all the accoutrements of fortune, and the new faculty of mind and body to right quite a number of wrongs. The first of whom will be each of the dandies who conspired to admit him to a generation of confinement. Vengence may be the Lord's, but the Almighy likely could not have done a better job of bringing the "olde public school tie boys" to their days of judgment. And, then there is the final twist. Of course, Danny is found out, and naturally he loses all that he gains; because, in the end justice must prevail. Or, must it? And, after all justice isn't always what comes out of a courtroom. Sometimes, "One good act of vengeance deserves another." This is an extremely entertaining read. Buy it. Buy two, in the event your spouse begins PRISONER and takes yours from you...

Oh what a tangled web we weave...

Two social groups come together in a pub. Danny Cartwright is out celebrating his engagement to Beth. Four nobs are out celebrating one of their birthdays. When one of the nobs insults Beth, the matter gets taken outside into the alley. Beth's brother is killed and the nobs frame Danny for the murder. Not everyone believes that he is guilty. Some reviewers have compared this to the Count of Monte Cristo (a wrongfully convicted man seeking revenge). In the plot, Danny is reading that novel in the prison library. One gets a good look at the British legal system, as well as the class system. Danny is a garage mechanic from London's East End who somehow got through school without learning to read and write (he is exceptionally smart, and has an amazing somewhat photographic memory). He is well liked, and has his allies. Locked away in prison, he has nothing else to do with his time, and two years of concentrated study can bring about major changes. Call it a finishing school. The villains do not have the solidarity they might desire (there are always weak reeds) and tend to get themselves in deeper over time. There is some very interesting legal maneuvering. There is also some information about Swiss banking. It might be noted that the author spent two years in a prison (as well as time in the House of Commons and House of Lords). He had the unique opportunity to research material for the novel first hand. It might also be noted that he attended Oxford University and cast the villains in the novel as being from Cambridge University.

Something Old, Something New

Wow! I read THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO as a teen, and it's always been a favorite of mine, so I was delighted to learn that Jeffrey Archer's new novel was a modern version of that well-loved tale. But A PRISONER OF BIRTH is a good deal more than a new spin on Alexandre Dumas--it's a fascinating, edge-of-your-seat thriller that actually makes a few valid points about the world today. From courtroom to prison to freedom with a glamorous new identity and a burning desire for revenge, the young hero of Archer's book is a worthy contemporary counterpart of Edmond Dantes, the "Count" of Monte Cristo. But you don't have to be familiar with the Dumas original to enjoy this terrific story. It's a good, old-fashioned page-turner that succeeds on its own merits. Highly recommended.
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