Three brave warriors--a prince from an ancient house, a former envoy of the Pharaoh, and the daughter of the Albi--struggle against an empire to establish a new world order around the monument at Stonehenge.
This first version of the novel was cut at the request of the publishers. The cut material was reinstated and the book expanded and published as Stonehenge: Where Atlantis Died.
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.
Harry Harrison (born Henry Maxwell Dempsey) was an American science fiction author best known for his character the The Stainless Steel Rat and the novel Make Room! Make Room! (1966), the basis for the film Soylent Green (1973). He was also (with Brian W. Aldiss) co-president of the Birmingham Science Fiction Group.
I have not finished reading this yet. At first I thought it was a nonfiction about Stonehenge, but then I started reading it and realized it is a historical fiction.
This book starts slow but gets increasingly better. The characters are well-fleshed out and alive. The suspense and pacing gets better after a couple chapters; when things start happening, they really suck you in. You have to keep turning pages to find out what happens next!
The world and cultures in this story are what really make it a gem. Descriptions and details are so vivid that I feel as if I am there, and the characters are such that I care and worry for them. Furthermore, little pieces begin to connect into a complete puzzle as the story goes along, making this quite the adventure. It is a very exciting tale with many things to pull people in - the history, the answer to the question "What was Atlantis like, perhaps?", romance, adventure, battles, a very brave hero, and the intrigue that comes with a different culture and time period.
I would recommend this book to anyone interested in mystical places, Atlantis, ancient history, Stonehenge, or someone who just wants to read a book that is not only exciting, but makes you think.
I picked up this book in either my freshmen or sophomore year of college (about 9 or 10 years ago) and I've just been carrying it around. It sounded interesting. It's a fictionalized idea about how Stonehenge came into being. And it was okay. And . . . just not all that captivating. I'm sure one of the guys who wrote it, since he's a professor of anthropology, did a great deal of research to make his idea work. And who knows? Maybe he's closer to the truth than I expect--I have no idea. My biggest problem with the book was the time given for things to happen (Oh, look! We've trekked from England to Greece in less than a week! On foot!) and that I really didn't care for the writing. It just didn't catch me up in the story. Honestly, not a book I'd really recommend.
The 40 page Afterword provides the archeological basis for the novel: the warrior culture, the ancient strife between Mycenae (Greek) and Atlantis (Minoan), the importance of tin, the culture of the proto-Celts, and the construction of Stonehenge. The novel is fleshed out over these bones, rich with detail but somewhat uneven in storytelling. Intep, the Egyptian builder, was the most interesting character to me.
A pretty good historic romp which tries to explain past events through the adventures of two men. I enjoyed the story and trying to work out where events were taking place (this is very badly explained by a poorly written historical footnote from a professor at the end). Unusually, however, for Harrison the main characters are totally unsympathetic and poorly developed. Another one for my run through of his books and one of the poorer ones.
A violent tale of how Stonehenge was built, as well as the fate of real world Atlantis. I like the way it ties in various cultures, and relates how they might see each other. It also tells a likely story to the strife of the day. Didn't feel the need to keep it though. Somehow, in the telling, it all felt rather ordinary, if bloody.
A short violent and brutal book about a time when life was short, violent and brutal. It starts in Atlantis and ends up in South West England as a group of shipwrecked adventurers travel across the land eventually ending up on Salisbury Plain where they are responsible for creating the megalith with the help of an Egyptian engineer. Needed a damn good map.
A good change from my usual reads..needing lots of 'mindless' reading to pass time. Low concentration is a nicer way to say mindless. This book, with bits of history thrown in, was great. There are hundreds more 'sci fi' type stories on the shelf waiting to be read..............
Dated,even when first published. An old idea that somehow a monument like Stonehenge couldn't be a British creation but had to have been engineered by Greeks and so on. I remember that in the notes at the end, Harrison's anthropologist mate was quite horrified by the new dates for Stonehenge which kind of blew their Greek/Atlantis theories out of the water. Stonehenge is much older but he was convinced the new dates must be wrong...actually, they WERE wrong, the monument is even older still! They also had a pet theory that Woodhenge nearby was some kind of gigantic tower where warriors lived, despite no evidence of any kind of a roof.Woodhenge was probably a religious structure, like Stonehenge, but at least Harrison had these 'warriors' living near Durrington walls, which WAS a settlement...some novels have people wandering all over the stones and living just outside the bank, which just never happened.Stonehenge was not a place where hundreds of people were milling about.