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Longsword  By  cover art

Longsword

By: David Pilling
Narrated by: Marston York
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Publisher's summary

England, AD 1266. The kingdom lies in ruins after years of bitter civil war. Simon de Montfort is dead, slaughtered in battle, and his surviving followers fight on with the fury of despair. Known as the Disinherited, these landless men infest the forests and highways and prey on the common folk.

Hugh Longsword, a common soldier, fights for the King against the rebels who threaten to destroy England. He is taken into the service of the Lord Edward, King Henry’s eldest son, and made to work as a spy. Edward sends him into the wild north country, home to the most dangerous rebel captains: men such as Sir John d’Eyvill and his savage cousin Nicholas, known as the Beast for his cruelty.

While Hugh spies on these cutthroats, the King gathers all his forces to attack Kenilworth Castle, greatest of the rebel strongholds. Though hopelessly outnumbered, the defenders hurl defiance from the walls and refuse to surrender. One assault after another is repulsed, even as the north country slides into chaos and another band of Disinherited seize the Isle of Ely in the fens of Cambridgeshire. From their watery fastness they ride out to attack the Jews of Lincoln, burning deeds, slaughtering innocents and kidnapping the wealthiest for ransom.

One of those taken captive by the rebels is Esther, a widowed Jewess. She is carried away to Ely, where the Jews are treated with inhuman cruelty. Esther is rescued by Hugh, and they are hunted through the marshes by teams of soldiers and wolfhounds. Together they must survive all the dangers of a war-torn land, where law and justice are fallen away and only the strongest can hope to prosper.

Longsword is the latest historical adventure novel by David Pilling, author of Reiver, Soldier of Fortune, The Half-Hanged Man, Caesar’s Sword and many more novels and short stories.

©2017 David Pilling (P)2018 W. F. Howes Ltd

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The story snd writing

Not only is this brilliantly written, with interesting characters and an illustrated landscape that puts the reader in the position of those characters, but the narration is outstanding.

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Excellent series

I have read more historical fiction books from this era than I can count, and thoroughly enjoyed all six of this series. Marston York is a tremendous narrator as well. In many of these type of books, the main character tends to rise from the bottom a little too quickly. Hugh Longsword felt more natural, relatable, and found himself in the midst of splendid historical moments during the reign of Edward I. If you like Griff Hosker, Bernard Cornwell and the like, give this a try.

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Entertaining, yet falls just short of FAVs such as

the Bernicia Chronicles, Night-Wolf series, or the Blood Song Series, etc.
However it does shed light on a little known time after the death of Lord(?) Monfort at Eversham concerning the group of rebels known as the "disinherited,"

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Strong recommend!

Don't look for happily ever after. This is a compelling story with strong characters set in a period that is overlooked in the historical fiction genre. If it were fantasy it would be called "grimdark" As a portrait of reality it's probably best described as honest, No excuses made. The reader seems to revert to a nasal wheedling voice for many antagonists where it may not always be appropriate.

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History come alive!

The story was a fascinating account of history. I'm sure lots of embellishments but also many truths of how ruthless society was during that time.

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Disgusting Gratuitous Sexualized Violence

I can see why these novels are free. The first Long Sword novel contains shockingly over-the-top sexualized violence against Hebrew (Jewish) women. The vitriol hurled at these women sounds more like contemporary misogynist racism than the imagined tensions between Catholics and Jews a thousand years ago.

The premise of the story is silly. Young soldier becomes an instant spy because he gets noticed by the King. It all goes downhill from there since the author give us no context for the motivations of the main character. I found myself saying, *why did he do that* more times than I care to count.

This book should not be offered by Audible given its dubious use of sexualized hatred as a plot enhancement.

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