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Patrick: Son of Ireland

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Slave, soldier, lover, hero, saint,—his life mirrored the cataclysmic world into which he was born. His memory will outlast the ages. Born of a noble Welsh family, he is violently torn from his home by Irish raiders at age sixteen and sold as a slave to a brutal wilderness king. Rescued by the king's druids from almost certain death, he learns the arts of healing and song, and the mystical ways of a secretive order whose teachings tantalize with hints at a deeper wisdom. Yet young Succat Morgannwg cannot rest until he sheds the strangling yoke of slavery and returns to his homeland across the sea. He pursues his dream of freedom through horrific war and shattering tragedy—through great love and greater loss—from a dying, decimated Wales to the bloody battlefields of Gaul to the fading majesty of Rome. And in the twilight of a once-supreme empire, he is transformed yet again by divine hand and a passionate vision of "truth against the world," accepting the name that will one day become legend . . . Patricius!

592 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published February 18, 2003

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About the author

Stephen R. Lawhead

101 books2,744 followers
Stephen R. Lawhead is an internationally acclaimed author of mythic history and imaginative fiction. His works include Byzantium, Patrick, and the series The Pendragon Cycle, The Celtic Crusades, and The Song of Albion.

Also see his fanpage at Myspace:
http://www.myspace.com/stephenlawhead...

Stephen was born in 1950, in Nebraska in the USA. Most of his early life was spent in America where he earned a university degree in Fine Arts and attended theological college for two years. His first professional writing was done at Campus Life magazine in Chicago, where he was an editor and staff writer. During his five years at Campus Life he wrote hundreds of articles and several non-fiction books.

After a brief foray into the music business—as president of his own record company—he began full-time freelance writing in 1981. He moved to England in order to research Celtic legend and history. His first novel, In the Hall of the Dragon King, became the first in a series of three books (The Dragon King Trilogy) and was followed by the two-volume Empyrion saga, Dream Thief and then the Pendragon Cycle, now in five volumes: Taliesin, Merlin, Arthur, Pendragon, and Grail. This was followed by the award-winning Song of Albion series which consists of The Paradise War, The Silver Hand, and The Endless Knot.

He has written nine children's books, many of them originally offered to his two sons, Drake and Ross. He is married to Alice Slaikeu Lawhead, also a writer, with whom he has collaborated on some books and articles. They make their home in Oxford, England.

Stephen's non-fiction, fiction and children's titles have been published in twenty-one foreign languages. All of his novels have remained continuously in print in the United States and Britain since they were first published. He has won numereous industry awards for his novels and children's books, and in 2003 was awarded an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters by the University of Nebraska.

also write under the name Steve Lawhead

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 179 reviews
Profile Image for H (trying to keep up with GR friends) Balikov.
2,125 reviews819 followers
January 29, 2018
When we first meet Succat, he is a spoiled teenager, the son of a prosperous citizen within the Roman Empire’s protection of Britannia. The first half of the book, told in first person, takes him quickly from there to Ireland and back to Wales and then to Gaul. In that time, he becomes a slave, a druid initiate, an outlaw, and a soldier. And, Britannia suffers the evacuation of Rome’s legions and begins to revert into a land of barbarians, survival skills and ritualistic Christianity.

Okay, might as well get the whole truth out at the start. I had no idea, when a GR friend suggested that we read this book that it was the story of St. Patrick. That name isn’t provided until well into the latter half of the book.

I had only read one other Lawhead book and that did not make me a fan. This book was able to charm me with its excellent research, imaginative plotting and detailed descriptions of life in the early Fifth Century. All this was possible even though I remained somewhat indifferent to the protagonist with his adolescent whims, lying and inability to think two steps beyond immediate gratification. Even when he has an epiphany, he chooses to ignore it. And, he also ignores the prediction that he could become one of the greatest bards among the druids.

Some might find this journey very frustrating as Succat goes from wastrel, to agnostic slave, to druid, to atheistic soldier, to broken man and then (of course) to one of the redeemed. But, for me, Lawhead deftly moved the story along. His research into everything from what a small Welsh outpost consisted of to how the Roman Senate functioned was always engaging.
You may recall that I reviewed Druids: A Very Short Introduction and felt frustrated by how little was really known about these people who served as a link between their “flock” and a dangerous natural world. Lawhead really hits his stride in his narration of what went on among the druids, how they amassed their expertise and why they were the nobility’s chief advisors. No matter that most is speculation, it makes a lot of sense and it is very thought-provoking.

The most difficult part is Lawhead’s extrapolation of the Ceile De movement. As I understand it, the movement began several hundred years AFTER the life of Patrick. It was primarily practiced by groups of monks who lived in smaller communities. But this author sees it as an outgrowth of Druidism and a counter to the nobility’s and fifth century Christianity’s failure to address “the needs of the people.” Patrick becomes Ireland’s foremost Ceile De proponent and his ability to perform wonders (many of them that he learned from the Druids) brings him and Christianity to prominence among the Celtic peoples. It’s an interesting, if not persuasive, hypothesis that does not explain why the Druids disappeared with hardly a trace remaining.

I’m telling you that you do not have to be a believer to enjoy this story.
Profile Image for Peter Krol.
Author 2 books63 followers
November 28, 2007
Lawhead is one of my favorite authors, and he followed through well on this book. This was my second time reading it.

Stephen Lawhead is an expert in Celtic history and mythology, and most of his stories are set in ancient Britain and/or Ireland. He retells Celtic legends as historical novels (rather than as fantastic legends) which fascinates me.

This novel tells the story of the famous St. Patrick, although the story is much different than the one I usually hear about Patrick. I'm most familiar with the legend of the great saint who saved Ireland by combating the druids and standing for the truth of Christianity. My wife and I sing the hymn attributed to St. Patrick every year on St. Patrick's Day (called "St. Patrick's Breastplate" or more commonly known as "I Bind Unto Myself Today.").

However, Lawhead's version of Patrick is of a man who goes through a crisis of faith (as most of his protagonists do). Lawhead is quite gifted at painting a picture of real life struggles, and the issues that come along with them. Through the course of this novel, Patrick must be broken of his trust in himself. In the end, he must look upon the work of his hands and see how worthless it is. This sets him free from his slavery to wealth, power, and fame. It is convicting to see that God must break us of ourselves before he can truly use us.

I must give a warning, though. Patrick's "Christianity" is not a true Christianity. I am familiar with the legend of St. Patrick resisting the druids, yet Lawhead's Patrick ends up synthesizing Christianity with Druidism (rather than fighting the druids, he joins them). In this novel, Christian priests are fat, lazy, selfish sons of guns, and the druids are noble, intelligent, and loving to all men. The one exception to the former category is the monk Pelagius. Historically, Pelagius was an arch-heretic of the church, teaching that men could be good enough to be accepted by God without needing Christ's atoning sacrifice. In Lawhead's novel, Pelagius is the only "Christian" who actually cares about someone other than himself. Thus he has a great influence on Patrick.

So, while I cannot recommend Lawhead's theology, I would still highly recommend his novels as excellent stories of human life. This is one of his best.
Profile Image for Dave Courtney.
897 reviews32 followers
March 14, 2017
Lawhead is one of my favorite authors, and after years of this book sitting on my shelf I finally managed to crack the cover.

Having finished it, I feel torn about my initial reactions. In terms of style, flow and narrative, Patrick: Son of Ireland certainly belongs with the best of his overall works. If nothing else, it is an entertaining story that weaves its sinner to (almost) saint premise in a rather compelling fashion.

But there remains a question about where to fit this book when it comes to the historical-fiction that Lawhead is so well known for. In truth, we know very little about who St. Patrick was, and his story remains somewhat subjective and elusive to modern ears. And depending upon which perspective you happen to be looking from, the way in which one filters through the complex components of the Celtic Mythology, the legendary stories, and the historical context could produce differing results.

All this simply means that, in terms of representing the historical person of Saint Patrick, Lawhead has a great deal of research and alternative thought and theory to pull from. So one (I would think) should be able to grant him a degree of freedom and creativity in bringing Patrick to life on page. Yet it is hard not to feel like he might be traveling a questionable or hazy line as he does this.

From the get go, Lawhead establishes the scope of his narrative by placing the book solely within the parameters of Patrick’s formative years. Save for a brief epilog, he stops well short of dealing with his eventual conversion of the Irish Celts to Catholicism later in his life. Personally, I thought the choice to focus on his early years was a compelling one. This is likely the period we know the least about, and Lawhead shapes the narrative around four names that have been passed down to us by the pages of history (Succast, Magonus, Patricius, Corthirthiac). Each name reflects a different part of his journey and transformation by dividing the book into four different sections.

As Lawhead introduces us to Patrick, we come to know him first by the name Succat. It is through the character of Succat that we quickly discover him as a rather flawed individual. Some might even say he is (and remains) an unlikeable protagonist in this story. I am not sure I agree with this, but Lawhead definitely seems interested in humanizing his sainthood. A Saint, at this point in his life, he most definitely is not. A liar and a lust (among other more grievous actions and characteristics) feel apter.

This is all well and good as he establishes an imaginative take on the young man’s personal nature, but as we follow Succat (a Romanized Brit) out of his entitled life and into his enslavement at the hands of the Irish, his attempted escapes and eventually his entry into the life of the Druid (which serves as freedom from slavery), the line between truth and fiction appears to get more and more complicated. As Lawhead is apt to do, he begins to fuse together elements of Druidism and Christianity into something that feels foreign to the Catholic faith that he has become synonymous with. It is during this period of living and learning with the Druids that Patrick not only befriends a Druid and falls in love with his sister, but also connects with the spiritual undercurrents of Druidism himself (magic, spirituality and practically included). It is out of his time with the Druids that the major theme of the book (the journey from sinner to saint and the forgiveness this entails) begins to establish itself.

And here-in lies the problem. If Patrick’s popular legacy remains grounded in his efforts to dispel paganism from Christianity and in his efforts to confront Druidism, Lawhead's efforts to marry the two seems a bit questionable. In fact, in Lawhead’s book, it is the institutionalized Church (the Priests) who tend to be the ones Patrick resists.

So, is what Lawhead doing here brave? Disrespectful? Heretical? Certainly, his eventual treatment of Pelagius (who of course became famous for the heresy of Pelagianism) as the only true and faithful Christian in Patrick’s life, could push the story over the line even further.

If I could make an argument for what Lawhead is going here, I think the freedom one might be willing to afford him here could also find room to afford him the benefit of the doubt in terms of personal research. What Lawhead is often very good at is mining the intricacies of an alternative view- point and controversial theories. He has always been intently interested in ancient religious context, and I am willing to bet that the story here owes much to the sources that helped him to imagine and consider Patrick’s earlier years. I do not know which sources he is pulling from, but his presentation of Patrick as a complex (almost) protagonist seems to fit with some of the historical pictures that I have encountered myself.

It is also worth adding that cross-cultural mission tends to be rife with the sort of marriage of pagan-Christian traditions that Lawhead reflects. Contextualization is a very real part of any evangelization, and often times in the Christian faith, important religious imagery finds a home in other more familiar cultural expressions. I don't think it is too far off to suggest that the relationship between the Druids and Patrick may have been slightly more ambiguous than popular belief ascertains. What’s more is that the emergence of Christianity in Ireland was far more fluid and all encompassing than simply being isolated to Patrick’s story. It was a gradual process, one that might have looked different both before and during Patrick’s time than it did 200 years after as the Catholic faith finally seemed to take root.

As Patrick’s journey took him out of the Druids lifestyle and back to his home, he arrives face to face with a stark picture of ruin and loss. Nothing is the same as he left it. The entitled and prosperous life that he once held is now gone, and it is in this place of ruin that he meets a friend from his past, a friend who starts him on the rocky road (which goes through Gaul and the Roman military and politics) to the Christian expression and faith, and his eventual call to return to Ireland.

History can be a complex monster, and it can become even more complex when it gets applied to important traditions. St. Patrick remains an important figure in Irish history. In this book he becomes a far more interesting man. What Lawhead does, and I give him due credit for this, is he challenges us to consider the more flawed nature of a Saint. In humanizing Patrick he almost makes him unlikeable. At the same time he is made relatable. Lawhead takes something sacred and sets it firmly into the messiness of the sacred journey. Does he take some liberties with interpreting this journey? Probably. But I was always left with the feeling that his interpretative choices flowed out of his own probing questions about who Patrick the man actually was. The choices in the story and his representation of the history feels intentional and grounded, and I think that the freedom he exercises in navigating this material feels appreciated and insightful rather than negligent or outright false.

This is not the story that you likely will have heard of Patrick. It is a reimagined story that is not afraid to peer inside the mess of the sacred tradition in order to ask some important questions. If that doesn’t sit well with you, you might find yourself put off by some (or all) of this book. But if you can appreciate what it is to imagine what sits in the gaps of this sacred tradition, I think you might really enjoy this take on Patrick: Son of Ireland.




Profile Image for Joseph Finley.
Author 6 books49 followers
March 14, 2012
I had anticipated that this novel would tell the story of how Saint Patrick converted the Irish Celts to Christianity. I was wrong. The book actually tells the tale of Patrick’s early life of as a Romanized Briton who is captured by Irish raiders and enslaved by an Irish chieftain for six years. Patrick ultimately escapes and returns home, then ventures to Gaul and Rome before returning to Ireland. Aside from a brief epilogue, the novel provides no account of Patrick’s later years, which earned him his sainthood. Instead, the author focuses much of the novel on Patrick’s captivity. And this is where the novel truly shines. Patrick’s enslavement introduces him to a druid named Cormac and his sister, Sionan, the woman with whom Patrick falls in love. After surviving several failed attempts at fleeing his captivity, Patrick escapes his brutal life with Cormac’s aid by agreeing to serve in a house of druids, and eventually studies to become a bard. This is where the novel becomes both fascinating and controversial.

The bards and druids of Lawhead’s Ireland can use magic, which firmly places this novel on the fine line between historical fiction and historical fantasy. Many of the druids and bards who teach Patrick are also members of the Ceile De, essentially Christian druids who believe in the one true God. Patrick ultimately becomes one of the Ceile De; he never becomes a priest or a bishop, though this is not necessarily foreclosed because the novel ends before the reader learns what becomes of Patrick later in life. Not surprisingly, this plot point is controversial for those who feel the novel downplays or even eliminates Patrick’s Roman Catholicism. After all, they argue, the Roman Catholic Church would never have canonized a druid. But I view Stephen R. Lawhead as taking artistic license for the sake of his story. And overall, his story works – especially the two-thirds or so of the novel that take place in Ireland. Although it was not what I expected, I enjoyed this novel, very much at times. And while the author may have taken artistic license with his subject, it works well in the end, telling a story of faith once lost only to be discovered again.
Profile Image for Paul.
83 reviews75 followers
November 2, 2020
This was a real departure for me, especially after three Bernard Cornwell books in a row. Wow, what different writing styles!
This is a good book. Well-detailed, thorough character development.
I needed an enjoyable stand-alone read, and this fit the bill well.
188 reviews10 followers
April 1, 2016
Most of this book just bothered me. It was not at all what I expected. S. Lawhead is a good writer and I have enjoyed many of his books, but I didn't like what he chose to write in this one. After reading some other books and articles on St. Patrick, including St. Patrick's confession, I think the author took literary license to the limit in creating his story. Instead of the title Patrick Son of Ireland, perhaps a better title would be Patrick Sinner Before Saint as that is what it definitely portrayed. It was not an uplifting book.
Profile Image for Mike Fendrich.
266 reviews9 followers
October 31, 2024
Lawhead is a favorite author of mine. He is a great storyteller and does tons of research to create a plausible world into which his characters live.

This is my second reading of Patrick. It is a compelling story, full of adventure, heartbreak, pain, vanity and completion for the main character. A couple of caveats for this one.
1. The story is eerily similar to Aidan in his epic tale "Byzantium" which I think is a little better book. But the main character story line is almost an analog. Didn't seem like Lawhead might have stretched himself here as much as he might have.
2. The sympathetic view of Pelagius. This was a real controversy, a presented heresy that needed to be addressed by the church. Could particular clergymen have been arrogant, boorish jerks? Absolutely. But Pelagius was wrong and is still wrong although from many accounts he was a kind man who tried to live a holy life. But his view of man's condition is thoroughly unbiblical.

Really liked the book.

Third reading - October 2024. Read during a trip to Accra, Ghana. May the fledgling church there, Sovereign Grace Reformed Church, be blessed beyond all we can think or imagine. There are those there who use the Name of Jesus to keep people from Jesus. If they only understood their fate if they do not repent and believe the true and living Christ. Lord, may it be so.
Profile Image for Kelly.
1,034 reviews72 followers
September 26, 2011
I was expecting a fairly accurate- but still fictional- account of Patrick's life. Fictional, of course, because we don't know much about his life; we have so little evidence to go on. But we do have *some* information.

I guess I expected too much. Taking this as a work of 95% fiction, it was interesting, but lacking. Patrick himself is a liar and a thief; he has no regard for those he claims to love and is utterly selfish. Lawhead tries to bring him around to sainthood by the end of the book and fails. I don't think the Church beatifies druids- and being Ceile De doesn't help.
Profile Image for Heitham Hammad.
121 reviews2 followers
June 22, 2023
"Looking forward to seeing other stories by this author. What an adventure! "
16 reviews
September 13, 2009
Patrick: Son of Ireland was a very historical, very exciting adventure. I was surprised to learn that Patrick is not Irish, but British, and that he was kidnapped and taken as a slave during an Irish raid on the coast. During his time in captivity he experienced beatings within an inch of his life (due to trying to escape several times), and eventually was brought to the Druid House to study under some great leaders that were part of the Ceile De, a group of Druids that have been enlightened regarding Jesus and Christianity.

After escaping Ireland at last, he returns to Britain and finds that all has changed since his departure over 6 years ago. Without giving away details, he returns to Ireland in the end to become a Druid and leads the Ceile De into the mission field of Ireland.

For those of you who do not know Stephen Lawhead's writings, the word Druid may come as a shock to you. However, Lawhead refers to Druids in many of his books as wise teachers and learners of everything. He also gives them a somewhat fictional role of controlling some elements (magic, if you will).

Lawhead is an extremely learned person, especially in Celtic and other European history and dives into the history of the book he is writing to make what little we know of the character come to life for his readers. In fact, the only written documents we have regarding Patrick are two letters that he wrote. I read one of the letters online after finishing Patrick just to see what his writing would be like, and in fact, I saw every bit of the personality Lawhead exposed in his book in the fabric of his writing. You should check it out sometime: http://www.yale-university.net/glc/ar...

I highly recommend this book, as well as Lawheads numerous other books.
Profile Image for Bess.
723 reviews
March 30, 2019
Okay, I feel I need to review this one. As a non-Catholic and a lover of historical fiction, emphasis on "fiction", I believe this is a completely plausible version of St. Patrick. Mr. Lawhead made St. Patrick real. And while you can idolize him or place him on a pedestal, you have to admit, it is nice to see a human's flaws. It makes them more real, more attainable, more drawn to, you're more connected.
It's like trying to read a book with unflawed characters, at some point you'll realize, while this all fine and good, where's the realism? You know?
So, this was an amazing read for me! I thoroughly enjoyed seeing the flaws, the falls, the redemption, the temptations and the rise to sainthood, as expected.
Give it a try. It's obviously not for everyone but if you're tired of hearing how all the saints were sheer perfection, let's add some humanity to them and read a "what-could-have-happened" version!
Happy reading!
Profile Image for Justin Wiggins.
Author 28 books219 followers
April 15, 2022
What an amazing historical fiction writer Stephen Lawhead is! In this amazing fictional work, Succat (Patrick) is taken as a slave from his home by Irish raiders, is beaten numerous times for trying to escape from Ireland, is stripped of his wealthy social status, becomes assimilated with the Irish people, becomes a bard, a druid, fights as a warrior in a Roman army; experiences marriage, love, painful loss and hellish grief, goes through an existential crisis, repents of his cowardice and selfishness, and in the end, he finds his vocational path back to Ireland, becomes a humble and very renowned saint, and is reunited with his son and the love of his life, Sionan. I highly recommend this book. It gives me the desire to see Ireland again, and I am looking forward to being there again this summer with great joy!
Profile Image for Jennifer.
35 reviews
March 1, 2013
I bought this a few years ago when I worked at B&N. I was in the middle of another one his books (can't recall which now, Merlin maybe?) and went ahead and purchased Patrick. While this is definitely a fast read, and interesting in parts, just like his other book, I felt very dissatisfied with the book as a whole. The character never is really likable. Lawhead takes a real person and pretty much fictionalizes Patrick's life which I find bold but maybe also disrespectful? Anyway, one of my favorite genres is historical fiction, particularly the early Celtic/British period. I think I'll stick with Morgan Llywelyn and Bernard Cornwell for my historical/fantasy needs.
25 reviews
March 14, 2013
Good fiction. Terrible historical accuracy. If you read it from that standpoint, it's an interesting read.
Author 4 books21 followers
April 25, 2021
Lawhead paints a sympathetic portrait of his flawed protagonist, and the story easily held my interest as it went from Britain to Ireland to Gaul to Rome and back to Ireland. Given that it was by Lawhead, I was expecting a bit more in the mysticism department, but that's neither here nor there. What disappointed me was the scope (especially given the tag "Son of Ireland"). The book details how the hero becomes Patrick, but we don't get any of his ministry/life as Patrick. The journey to that point was interesting, but I just wanted/expected more after that point.
Profile Image for Grant Fawcett.
Author 1 book1 follower
January 3, 2023
In his typical fashion, Lawhead brings this beautiful historic narrative to life in graphic emotional detail. The undulating tale weaves itself through Roman Europe through the life of the most seemingly Ill-fortuned character. As always, there are a satisfying number of surprises and the narrative concludes gracefully and in its fullness.
30 reviews
May 26, 2022
Pretty good book about Patrick's life! Slow at times but overall good. between 3.5 and 4.
Profile Image for Connor Reed.
116 reviews1 follower
July 30, 2018
I love reading long epics because you just get this mental coziness of being coddled between hundreds of pages. I am not sure how historically accurate this novel is to the tale of St. Patrick, but it was an interesting take on his transformitive journey from noble to slave to saint. It also leaves you with more of a want to read about his later work and how he shaped the faith of that dear island. At times you forget this book is about a real person in the way that Lawhead shapes the story and brings drama and action into each scene.
8 reviews
April 9, 2013
Was disappointed that in reading this book I learned nothing about the actual historical person St. Patrick. Likewise, I don't feel like I learned anything about Druidism, but that feel that Lawhead dangerously mixes his obsession with it with his Christian beliefs in order to somehow reconcile the two. Sadly all the women in this book are two dimensional and therefore I wasn't moved by any of its romance. However, Succat is an interesting character to get to know and the book is an easy, entertaining read that at times is a page-turner.
Profile Image for Jacob Aitken.
1,687 reviews418 followers
August 28, 2016
One of Lawhead's better pieces. The story flows well and on most historical points Lawhead did his research well. He utterly misunderstands Pelagius, imputing to him motives Pelagius never had and having Pelagius attacked for things the Romans never accused him of.

And the main character has the personality of a dead fish. Aside from that, though, it is a good book.
Profile Image for Lorna.
68 reviews2 followers
August 21, 2012
I doubt that St Patrick would recognize himself in most of this book (which is understandable because so little is actually known of him) but it's still a good story. Well written with an interesting look at the culture of early Ireland. Somewhat lengthy but worth the read.
Profile Image for Monica.
359 reviews7 followers
February 17, 2014
Interesting novel, thought the story was pretty good. The ending was a bit of a let down though. I wouldn't read it again, but it was a nice light read.
1,066 reviews9 followers
July 21, 2020
Another excellent book from Mr. Lawhead

The author has a gift for making the characters seem very much alive, very real, & well fleshed put. The attention to historical detail is well done.
The story starts with a bonfire, a man encouraging his men, then moves to the life of the main character, Succat. He is, likely, a young teenager, of a noble family, spoiled and willful. He rushes back to the family estate to try & get his family & their workers away from Irish raiders. Instead, he ends up a slave in Ireland for 7 years, I would say 2, perhaps 3, as a Druid. The man who is mentoring him emds up dead before he can asl for Siccat's freedom, & he suspects a rival Druid who hates them both (especially since Succat had a vision lasting 3 days at his initiation) and who manages to ingratiate himself with the bards in what amounts to their bard convention and takes over the Druid house. Succat manages to escape by telling his lover he is going to look for her brother, and tells the man on the ship of traders that has moved down to the next town that he has been sent to look for a bard who is visiting in Briton, as it was then called. The ship's captain agrees to let his bargaining skills pay his way, & to remove his slave torc once they're out of Irish waters...except he does such a good job that his continued servce is demanded. Finally, he bargains once again and the collar comes off, and he is back close to the home of his youth.
He finds his estate sold out from under him because he wasn't there to claim it for the 1st 5 years after his parents' death. He hunts for his Druid friend, and finds the place where he was last, deserted. As he makes his way back to the former friend who has become a priest, he decides to go with them to Gaul. One of the other friends of his dissipated youth is in the army, & after talking with the mercenaries, he decides to join them & ends up as the sole survivor of a battle where the German tribes slaughter 3 legions and hundreds of mercenaries. He ends up tasked with the rescue of an injured senior Roman official, and is promoted only the field to regular Roman army. He fonally meets the 2nd friend, who is part of a guard for the family of the man Succat rescued, an important and powerful person. He is taken in by the man and his family and started on the path to the senate. He ends up marrying the man's daughter, has a baby, hires a servant who is old but capable, and then plague hits Rome. He manages to get his wife, baby, a soldier who is helping him guard them, and some food, money, and clothing to the family's main estate on an island off the coast. But it is too late. His mother in law died before they left. His wife, then his baby, then the servant, all die. He gets it but survives the disease. He learns the man he rescued, his son, & the tutor have also died, so all they own is now his. He falls into a deep depression, looks hard at his life, and sees a vision of an Irishman handing him a scroll that asks him to return to Ireland. He gifts the island estate to the 2 older servants who have looked after the place for ages and who looked after him and his family, burying the dead with him and asking a priest physician for help. He returns to Rome to meet the senator who has befriended him, makes an offer on his handling the sale of the remaining estates, takes his money, and returns to Ireland...via a boat that requires dry dock repairs, another boat that gets caught out in an unexpected storm that makes him violently seasick.
He eventually makes his way back to the man who enslaved him, first meeting with the woman who was his lover, & finds her brother, the bard for whom he went looking, and he goes to the main hall & asks to buy his freedom, offering oayment for the tome he didn't render his services to the man, as well as interest on that. The Druid helps him convince the lord to accept the offer. He meets his son, marroes his lover, and returns to his Druid training. The epilogue takes you back to the bonfire.
Like all of his books, this one is excellent. I haven't yet found a book of his that I didn't thoroughly enjoy.
Profile Image for Kristi Hudecek-Ashwill.
Author 2 books48 followers
December 10, 2021
Finally! I thought I would never get this book read. It's overlong, dry in places, yet is oddly interesting. It's not a genre a normally read. I wanted to something different and I got it. I did take a break from it at 69% complete to read a couple of other books because it got monotonous, but I was determined to finish it.

This is a story about Succat, the son of a nobleman, and his life from about age sixteen, if my memory serves me right, into adulthood. His town was stormed and he was taken as a slave to Hibernia. He tried to escape a couple of times and was nearly killed for it, but he never gave up. He was tenacious, but he was also a liar and that made me lose any sort of compassion I should have had for him. Did he suffer? Yes. Did he lose hope? Yes. Did he experience hate and violence? Yes. Did I feel sorry for him? No.
I thought he did Sionan wrong and that he joined the druids for the wrong reason. Everything he said and did was to benefit himself and lying to Sionan and the druids were just more self-serving acts. It didn't matter what anybody else wanted or how his actions would affect others. All that mattered was that he got what he wanted, whatever the cost.

The book takes us into his failures, triumphs, and heartbreaks. Despite the fact that I thought he was a wretch, I still found the story to be strangely fascinating. He was a selfish bastard for sure, but for some inexplicable reason, I still wanted him to come out on top, even if he didn't deserve it.

His life came full circle in a span of ten or twelve years, I'd say, maybe longer. The time line isn't well defined, so it's hard to say. It was a satisfying ending, although I'm not sure what the epilogue was all about, other than to show he acquired some sort of mystical power or something. I'm sure someone else who is into this genre would understand it better.

Overall, it isn't a bad book. I don't consider the time I spent reading it to be a waste. I did learn something about the druids and have a whole new perspective on them, not that I gave them much thought before I read this. I figured they were pagans and left it at that. I now know nothing could be farther from the truth.

I wish there had been more character descriptions for all of the characters. I wish I'd liked Succat more than I did. I really didn't like how he used people to get ahead. I didn't like his deceit. But no matter what I think or how I felt about him, it made him a powerful character.
654 reviews8 followers
February 26, 2024
So many fantasy novelists write in trilogies and series that it can be difficult finding a starting point into their work, without committing to something longer, which can be an issue if you’re not sure if you’ll like it. When a friend of mine gave me a bunch of Stephen Lawhead novels, this was a problem I faced, as most of them were in series, but fortunately among them was “Patrick”, one of Lawhead’s later works, but at least a stand-alone story.

With a full title of “Patrick: Son of Ireland”, this is supposedly a historical fiction novel depicting the early days of the man who would become the Patron Saint of Ireland. He was born into a wealthy Roman family in Southern Britain, until he was captured by Irish raiders and taken back to Ireland to be sold as a slave. After several failed escape attempts, he settles into life as a shepherd and then, having befriended a druid, as a trainee in the druid houses.

However, when enemies conspire against him even there, Succat manages to finally leave Ireland and heads for home. When he arrives, he finds that nothing is the same, as his family didn’t survive the raid and his home has been sold. His old friends survived, but they have all grown in different ways and, having failed to find his druid friend, Succat heads for Gaul to join the Roman army and it is here that he starts to find success.

Whilst I don’t know my history well enough to know how much of the novel has its basis in actual history, it was a well-paced story that kept moving along, even when Succat was stuck on an Irish hillside with only sheep for company. The pace wasn’t always even, with the end coming in something of a rush, even in a novel that was quick of pace to start with. It may be that, no matter what was going on, Lawhead describes it well, so you can feel more involved in both the story and Succat’s life.

The one issue I did have with the novel, apart from the ending being a touch abrupt, was that the print was smaller than I’m used to. This did mean reading it took a little longer than expected, as I tend to do a lot of my reading late at night, so a combination of tired eyes and the small print. But this was a novel worth persevering with and whilst Lawhead isn’t the equal in descriptive writing of Ben Kane when it comes to battle scenes, he does know how to tell a tale worth reading.
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134 reviews5 followers
April 26, 2020
In my opinion, absolutely no one does historical fiction as well as Stephen R. Lawhead, and 'Patrick: Son of Ireland' is no exception.

A young nobleman is captured by raiding pirates and spends seven painful years a slave to an Irish chieftain. At last he escapes, betraying his friends and the woman he loves, and makes his way to Gaul. He becomes a soldier, rises in the ranks, and achieves a life of promise in Roman society. Yet he is haunted by his memories of Ireland and comes to believe that he has a special mission there: to convert the Irish people to Christianity.

Lawhead’s writing style (first-person narrative) takes a little getting used to, and cannot be quickly read, but is masterly in transporting the reader to vivid lands, ancient times and into the intricate lives of the story’s characters. The reader easily becomes attached to the protagonist and for me the read was an emotional one.

Another quality I love about Lawhead’s work, (Patrick in particular) is that the reader never knows where the story is going, and the plot can (and frequently does) change dramatically from chapter to chapter.

Two philosophical questions that Patrick raises throughout Patrick is… to what extent did the pagans (in this case Irish druids) have knowledge of the one true God and His Son? Are some ‘pagans’ actually more closer to God than some ‘Christians’? As a result, this book compelled me to research the history of Saint Patrick and Europe’s druids, and any book that does that in my opinion is a great one.
20 reviews
August 7, 2017
I enjoyed the book, although slow moving at times, and it was as well written as anything by Stephen Lawhead has been. But I struggled with Succatt/Patrick as the protagonist, as he never really became likable. Yes, there were moments throughout the story where some redeeming qualities shone through, and yes, he suffered through one tragedy after another, but throughout the whole story, he was selfishly driven and a jerk to everyone, including his one true love, who we abandoned while fleeing Ireland! It's hard to reconcile the frustration with his character, because you can certainly understand the despair he felt throughout his sufferings, slavery, and almost dying on a number of occasions, but it only made him more callous and cold to those around him, rather than growing through it all. When his wife and infant daughter die by the plague, I nearly cried. I understand the need for realism in a historical fiction novel, so I suppose it was a 'necessary' element, though that did not detract from the heart wrenching sadness of it. And then, like many of Lawheads works, the story ended rather abruptly. He's living in the villa that he inherited from marrying into royalty, has no desire to go on living, is ready to die and has given up on life, then all of a sudden he has this eye-opening experience with a mysterious figure holding scrolls while lying on the shore, and then within 20 pages or so out of a 600 page book, the story is over. No reconciliation with his childhood friends that he had a falling out with. No delving in to the actual legend of Saint Patrick. Lawhead is a genius at telling stories and at almost literally picking you up and placing you on those pages, but in so many of his works, he leaves much to be desired when it comes to closing things up. I wanted more. As long as it took me to finish it, I wanted more of the story. Knowing little to nothing of the true story of Saint Patrick, I was hoping to be slightly more informed about who he was and what he is known for. This does a great job of telling the fictional version of his early life and what led up to him becoming the Saint Patrick of history, but it did nothing for actually teaching me about Saint Patrick. I didn't read this book to be taught, but it would've been nice to have some of that in it. All in all, I enjoyed the book, but it was hard to like the character throughout the story. So often I was mad at him for the decisions he was making and the way he was treating people around him, but I'm happy that I read it.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
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505 reviews7 followers
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August 25, 2025
“Yet you wear disappointment like a crown, Sinoan,” I told her. 149

Super exciting and engaging plot- a wild time to be alive, when kidnappings were common and it was so easy to disappear. Life was so fragile. I enjoyed imagining Patrick the real man, figuring out the next right steps when life kept throwing roadblocks at him. Thinking of his fidelity through his struggles, especially letting go of family and an easier life in Britain, is something I want to take to prayer. Lawhead really shines with writing characters you care about in beautiful ways, even though the early setting is not my usual preference for historical fiction I was hooked the whole time.

That said, you can really tell the author is not Catholic-specifically the glaring lack of celibacy in Patrick’s life. While celibacy was not always adhered to especially in the early church, it’s not even a consideration for this version of Patrick. From Patrick’s own writing we know he was not in a relationship during his time in ministry, so this was a big issue for me. A meaningful life and vibrant ministry is possible while staying single, an important theme in our faith and something that deserves more thoughtful treatment than inserting a girlfriend.
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