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Uther (The Camulod Chronicles, Book 7) di…
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Uther (The Camulod Chronicles, Book 7) (originale 2000; edizione 2001)

di Jack Whyte

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
788928,209 (3.92)23
With Uther, Jack Whyte, author of the richly praised Camulod Chronicles, has given us a portrait of Uther Pendragon, Merlyn's shadow--his boyhood companion and closest friend. And the man who would sire the King of the Britons. From the trials of boyhood to the new cloak of adult responsibility, we see Uther with fresh eyes. He will travel the length of the land, have adventures, and, through fate or tragedy, fall in love with the one woman he must not have. Uther is a compelling love story and, like the other books in the Camulod Chronicles, a version of the legend that is more realistic than anything that has been available to readers before.… (altro)
Utente:firecrazed
Titolo:Uther (The Camulod Chronicles, Book 7)
Autori:Jack Whyte
Info:Tor Books (2001), Edition: New, Mass Market Paperback, 928 pages
Collezioni:La tua biblioteca
Voto:****
Etichette:arthur, arthurian, Arthurian Legend, roman, roman britan, historical fiction, fiction, eagles, camelot, Camulod, Camulod Chronicles, a dream of eagles, king arthur, adventure

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Uther di Jack Whyte (2000)

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This is challenging to review. On the one hand, I read it, and didnt put it down. On the other hand, I cant really say that this book “worked” for me. The parallel narrative with the previous book made me slightly curious about filling in the gaps, but also made the book drag a bit at times (and the points where the author “fast forwards” while reminding you of Merlyn’s perspective were very jarring). The main issue I had is that the character development and progression of Uther is just not great. Honestly, Merlyn’s wasnt either, and I found myself missing Publius Varrus and the general tone and theme of the first two books. There’s a lot of chaos in this one - armies appearing out of nowhere to put Uther into bigger and bigger messes that, while atmospheric, never really made a lot of sense. If Lot is so unlikable and nuts, how is he convincing thousands of mercenaries to show up and fight whomever they see on the road? Maybe the world was really like this, but from a reader’s perspective, it just felt like senseless chaos, and Uther’s abnormally developed sense of honor was completely at odds with the situations he found himself in. Concepts didnt develop in this book the way they promised to in the first 2-3. We didnt learn more about the concept of Camulod, or even Cambria, and overall the philosophical style of the first two books was totally absent.

Maybe all of this was intentional (to some extent, it surely was), but the books are definitely trending in a direction I’m less curious about, and thats disappointing. I’ll keep reading, but I look forward to the next less than I did before.

As a note, I read this after The Eagles’ Brood because that’s how my books were numbered. Realizing now that maybe that was not the correct reading order, but while reading it felt reasonable/natural. ( )
  mrbearbooks | Apr 22, 2024 |
Jack Whyte is a competent romancer, but his penultimate contribution to Arthuriana is a mixed product. The love story is relatively mawkish, and his dependence on co-incidence and false climaxes rather than sup plotting is in full flower. this is an embedded story, that is to say that it occurs while the main line novel "The Eagle's Brood" is also happening to many of the minor characters in both works. This technique was done far more effectively by Stephen Grundy in his working of the Nibelungen Lied into two works, "Rhinegold" and "Attila's Treasure." I think the Grundys are far more likely to be permanently retained should a weeding of my shelves prove necessary. Returning to Whytes ethos, he remains principally in the very poorly documented fifth Century Britannia, and his cast still centres about the family of Caius "Merlyn" Britannicus who ends this chapter as the guardian, or uncle of the fully orphaned Arthur, an infant of several weeks age. The plot is primarily that of the gradual maturing of Uther Pendragon, here cast a a Celtic king, albeit fully accepted into the survivalist community of Camelud, set up by his Grandfather. Other than the names, there is little yet to link this collection of stories to the Mallory characters and motivations, or to what we do know about the history of the declining roman presence in the West of England. Does it move, yes! Are the battle scenes still far to complex for the technology of the times? Yes. Has Mr. Whyte learned how to write effectively of atrocities? Not yet. Has he really comprehended the morality and personal habits of the Celtic Society that existed alongside the Roman parts of Britannia? No, I read in however errors that might arise of a Presbyterian boyhood? I think I do. So far the Camelud Chronicles remain in my list of ineffective Arthuriana, with "The Mists of Avalon" by Bradley? Yes they do. However, the reading public does continue to buy both these works, sooo... Those who like this sort of thing, will like this chapter of the chronicles. ( )
  DinadansFriend | Jun 7, 2021 |
The seventh book in the Camulod Chronicles. It’s set during the same time period as The Eagles’ Brood (book three), but from the perspective of Uther Pendragon. This is the story of Uther’s childhood in the Pendragon clan, the duty he feels to follow in his father’s footsteps and become their king (even if he would secretly prefer to live in Camulod), his romance with Igraine of Cornwall and the birth of their son Arthur. I liked that we finally got an answer to the mystery of who killed Merlyn’s wife Cassandra, and I loved that Uther knew Merlyn suspected him but was certain that if he could just talk to his cousin and explain, all would be right between them again. He loved Merlyn like a brother until the day he died, even when Merlyn hated him, and he would have been glad that Merlyn took charge of his son and raised him to be king - in fact, it would probably be his ideal scenario. That makes me feel much better about that whole arrangement.
This book was different from the others in the series, because it was told in third person instead of first person. Uther isn’t the type to write memoirs, unlike Merlyn or his grandfather Varrus. This means that for the first time, we got women as POV characters. At first I wasn’t thrilled about this, because what it mostly seemed to mean was more rape/attempted rape scenes. But then we got to Igraine, and having her point of view was excellent. I enjoyed her romance with Uther more than any other romance so far in the series. ( )
  elusiverica | Aug 15, 2020 |
Southwest Britain tale, after Romans left, 800 plus pgs, good story to keep me busy for 5 days. I'd hate to have lived then, I'm to soft and kids learned to cope then like only few adults do now. Would our generation & our kids ever drop over dead if we had to live as they did then. ( )
  donagiles | Jan 26, 2012 |
This was another great book in the Camulod series. I really enjoyed it but my only complaint was that it was a bit long. It sometimes felt like the story would never end. I have really enjoyed this whole series. ( )
  Iudita | Oct 24, 2011 |
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With Uther, Jack Whyte, author of the richly praised Camulod Chronicles, has given us a portrait of Uther Pendragon, Merlyn's shadow--his boyhood companion and closest friend. And the man who would sire the King of the Britons. From the trials of boyhood to the new cloak of adult responsibility, we see Uther with fresh eyes. He will travel the length of the land, have adventures, and, through fate or tragedy, fall in love with the one woman he must not have. Uther is a compelling love story and, like the other books in the Camulod Chronicles, a version of the legend that is more realistic than anything that has been available to readers before.

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