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Hardcover The Siege of Isfahan Book

ISBN: 0393049884

ISBN13: 9780393049886

The Siege of Isfahan

(Book #2 in the The Abyssinian Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

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Book Overview

It is twenty years since Jean-Baptiste Poncet, through his apothecary skills and daring diplomacy, cured the ailing Negus of Abyssinia and saved that country from the political ambitions of the Sun... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Fine tale of adventure in Fareway Places.

A read this novel in its original French. I absolutely loved it.Written in an extremely elegant language full of humour and genuine knowledge of the subject, it is a book that I simply could not put down. As a lover of history and good literature I find that both are entertwined here in a very successfull way. The novel offers us several interesting stories based on historical facts that are generally not known;de stories of Mr.de Maillet ,Cardinal Alberoni,the Swedish captives in Siberia a.o. Again the voyage of Poncet and his friends is filled with interesting details about the places they pass. The placid life -style in Ispahan is also depicted in detail.All through the novel we learn new aspects of the life and customs in very different areas and of very different people. The chapter on the Scythian Kurgans is also amusing and somewhat in the way of the opening of the Tomb of King TUT. I think this is one of those perfect books where eruditism is used in such a way that it becomes a pleasant read for everybody and still is more than a simple adventure book. Written with typical French finesse, I hope in translation it will not loose some of its original magic.

Exotic location, intrigue, reminiscent of G.A. Henty

Rufin has given us an excellent piece of historical fiction reminiscent of the works of G.A. Henty and James Mitchner. As one who travelled overland from Mashad, Iran to Herat, Afghanistan in March 1971 and April 1972, while an American Peace Corps volunteer in Iran, (6/70-6/72), I can relate to the setting. Shah Tahmasp II was ruling as the last of the Safavid Shahs of Persia, when two Afghan 'sardars', Mahmud and Ashraf conquered Isfahan, the Safavid capital, as well as the earlier capital Qazvin. Mahmud and Ashraf were from the Hotaki (Ghilzai) dynasty. They imposed Sunni rule briefly on Shi'ia Persia. The book has much suspense and is historically accurate. An excellent read.
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