List price: $16.95 (that's 30% off!)
Used price: $10.00
Buy one from zShops for: $11.17
This book is beautifully illustrated and has something for all children, especially our growing hispanic population. The main character moves around a lot because his parents are migrant farm workers. What a wonderful story. A must read for 4 to 9 year olds
Used price: $12.95
Collectible price: $14.82
And who could not be amused at times by Hurgood himself as a bard and then a knight, and then not fear for him when he comes to realize his tenuous place as a subject to the tyrant King.
The historical details and splendid dialogue of the time are well researched, from the major events and people true to life down to little things like unwashed boards for plates, and to own a Bible risked the stake.
As an author, Robert L. Plunkett is on a par with the likes of Jules Verne and H. G. Wells. "A California Dreamer in King Henry's Court" is a "must have" for science fiction and history buffs. You won't be disappointed.
Used price: $7.39
"The thick-laden dust of the room, the lay of the lines on her face, the peremptory nature of her dull arrogant stare: the whole crushed his soul like a stone. The handle turned and reluctantly, slowly, he restored the mask of nails."
"He snatched the leg. In a frenzy the lips smacked, spraying red grease upon the canvas, and those unfortunate enough to stand near, like water from a sprinkler... Fish threw it in the trees. Disgust, and horror, shone from the face of Stalkin and the other sentinels. The lips rippled and snapped, cleaning themselves of flotsam. A forearm finished the job."
The characters are as original and memorable as anything from Dickens. Fish, the stubby overseer of the docks and slave of the Golden Cyclops. King Kot, the treacherous miser whose "piebald raiment awaits." Macius, the dancing enigma, never quite sure whose side he is on. Overall is the Quest. Flores follows the trail of Amina across a bizarre alien world, piecing together its meaning through "shifting veils" until he confronts the Adversary of Men, and challenges him to explain himself. Which he does, admirably.
The Selk King is a tour de force of the imagination, and destined for cult status. For the first time, pulp fiction has an author who thinks. The genre may not be revived by this work, but it has certainly been transformed.
Used price: $3.95
Collectible price: $10.59
By far the most intriguing thought in the book for me is the authors assertion that what the problem with this world and men is that there is a overwhelming dominance of boyish, immature masculinity and hardly any mature, male masculinity.
To paraphrase the author: The world is full of boys pretending/playing to be men.
The book begins with a short intro in the difference between immature boy psychology and men psychology and some of their manifestations. Then Mythology and Jungian psychology are used to explain and highlight the King, Warrior, Magician and Lover. For each the author explains and differentiates between their full expression and their 'distorted' hyper-expression and under-expression which are both inferior and negative.
In general the focus was to much on the mythology part of the argument. I would have preferred a more psychology heavy treatment of the subject. But this is mostly a sign of the direction of my current interests. I would have as well wished there would have been more about how the boy vs men psychology manifestations differ and play out for each of the King, Warrior, Magician, Lover quartet.
But maybe more of that can be found in the 4 other books of the 5 book series.
However, once I started reading it I finished it in one long sitting.
The concepts are simple and make sense.
The core concept is that every man has varying amounts of King (representing the ability to bring order out of chaos, and a sort of benevolent use of power), Warrior( the ability to marshal resources, have courage, bear pain, make clear choices based on facts not emotions), Magician (or "alchemist" - concerned with knowledge and skill, and how to use it), and Lover (emotionally connected to others, having empathy).
Each one of these attributes has many good qualities; they can turn negative however, in both active and passive ways. The book cogently explains the symptoms of this - this was the part of the book that made me think the authors knew what they were talking about, in that I saw myself and my co-workers in some of the examples.
Used price: $14.40
Buy one from zShops for: $21.50
Yet this is not even really a quibble with the book. What you will come away with when you read this is this feeling: Praise God for the incredible work He has done and is doing.
Used price: $5.00
Collectible price: $12.25
Used price: $1.99
Collectible price: $5.45
Buy one from zShops for: $8.00
Used price: $115.76
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $2.50
Buy one from zShops for: $4.95
The Minnesota person claimed that reading this book was a complete waste of time and furthermore that there were long passages that seemed incomprehensible. I can see how this might be true for a person of finite literary sophistication, so I'm going to assume that the reader must have been a high school student who tackled reading beyond his/her level of understanding, patience, and appreciation. The book is rich with historic accuracy about medieval life and every page is packed with subtle, humorous digs at both 6th century ignorance as well as criticism of his own 19th century attitude toward progress in the industrial northern states from where our protagonist hails. Obviously, the reader from Minnesota missed the point.
The reader from Tibet accused Twain of having anti-religious views. Twain's criticism was not of religion; it was of the church's hypocritical practices in _both_ the 6th and 19th centuries. It is still true today. In chapter 10, Twain writes: "Everybody could be any kind of Christian he wanted to; there was perfect freedom in that matter. But...I was afraid of a united Church; it makes a mighty power, the mightiest conceivable, and then when it by-and-by gets into selfish hands, as it is always bound to do, it means death to human liberty, and paralysis to human thought."
When was this more true than in the middle ages, when the Catholic Church orchestrated Crusades, was genteel in an age of feudalism, and later killed infidels in their inquisitions? It's clear that Twain simply doesn't wish to have a sectarian bias influence secular affairs; our First Amendment supports Twain's point of view.
You'd do best to disregard those other reviews, which hold Twain responsible for their own lack of understanding and appreciation of his novel, and read the book for yourself. It will be well worth your time.
List price: $34.95 (that's 30% off!)
Buy one from zShops for: $23.39