Author picture

George Green (1) (1956–)

Author of Hound

For other authors named George Green, see the disambiguation page.

3 Works 153 Members 5 Reviews

Works by George Green

Hound (2003) 65 copies, 2 reviews
Hawk (2005) 23 copies, 2 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1956
Gender
male
Birthplace
Dublin, Ireland
Map Location
Ireland

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
Author's retelling of the Irish legend of Cuchullain. narrated by his faithful charioteer, Leary. It begins with Leary's shipwreck on the Irish shore, rescue by Ulstermen, and his lifelong association with the Champion of Champions, Cuchullain. It was pretty slow until about page 350 or so, then it really picked up with the battles with Queen Maeve of Connaught, ending with Cuchullain's death and dissolution of the kingdom of Ulster. Fantasy elements are pretty much left out.

Now I'm tempted show more to read The Táin: From the Irish epic Táin Bó Cúailnge. The novel had all the elements of a good epic, but the tone--Leary's inner thoughts, opinions, and musings--just put me off and spoiled the book for me. It seemed as though the author was trying hard to be TOO clever and TOO humorous. Leary came across to me as a smart aleck. I wonder why no one caught these: Julius Caesar fighting Boudicca although Britain hadn't been conquered yet; Julius tried [and failed]. I don't know the supposed time period of the story, Leary, a born German who has lived in Rome for awhile mentions the Colosseum several times, but the latest emperor he mentions is Nero. The Colosseum wasn't even built until later. Recommended, with reservations. show less
Enjoyable novel about a Romanized German bestiarius. He's ordered by Sejanus [actually Sejanus's servant FOR Sejanus to go to the village of his birth, obtain an unusual animal for the arena and transport it back to Rome. His family will be held hostage until he returns. A spy is in their midst, unbeknownst to Serpicus, companions, and soldiers helping him. There are many exciting scenes, the most memorable being his journey to Germany and the skirmish between Romans and his villagers. There show more were many implausible incidents and the deus ex machina trope was used too often: last-minute rescues, etc. show less
While still searching the library for a newer (and US-based) version of this book, I took extensive notes and found that most of the instructions and exercises have helped tremendously in my current Work In Progress. Highly recommended reading, with several notebooks at hand!
This is story of a man's journey across Roman Europe - no mean feat in those days - from the heart of the Empire to Ireland. a land with fierce warriors, but if anything a culture more sophisticated than its counterpart England. A land of heroes, warriors and poets. It is the story of a young boy, an outlander, whose birth is shrouded in mystery who grows up to be the greatest warrior of them all. As he grows to manhood his deeds become the stuff of legend, but as armies gather against him, show more he must face his greatest challenge of all. This is the tale of Cuchullain, the Hound of Ulster. show less

Statistics

Works
3
Members
153
Popularity
#136,479
Rating
½ 3.3
Reviews
5
ISBNs
40
Languages
1

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