The Sterkarm Handshake

by Susan Price

Sterkarm (1)

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Having traveled to a sixteenth century border clan in England through a tunnel created by a twenty-first century company, Andrea must decide in which era she will live.

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12 reviews
A really good romp, but obvious that there is a lot of thought and intelligence underpinning it, so a very satisfying read. The characters really come alive to me as the author treats them all as human individuals. No cardboard characters or stereotypes here. The time travel framework allows a great juxtaposition of two cultures. The 16th century and the 21st century passions work out wonderfully differently, yet splendidly the same, from the same stuff of human life. And good fun.
This is a time travel/sci-fi/historical fiction/romance, which also places it beyond the genres I normally read. That's a good thing! The reviews of this book here on LT and also on Amazon range from the effusive to the tepid to the scornful, and I understand all of those reactions. This book has a lot going for it. FUP, a British 21st century corporation, has developed "The Tube," a device that allows time travel. The tube is set up to transport employees to the 16th century borderland of England and Scotland, where they plan to exploit the land's abundant natural resources, and eventually open the area for authentic time-travel tourism (but first something needs to be done about the authentic smells, mud, cramped towers, food, and show more pillaging natives). The company has established agreements with and purchased land from local governments on both sides, but also must deal with the Sterkarms, a fierce, lawless group that inhabits this border, and looks out for itself. Andrea, a 21st-century anthropologist 'embedded' with the Sterkarms, is studying them, feeding the FUP information, but has also been embraced by them, and falls in love with Per, the leader's son. Thus, Andrea is caught between the two worlds, and her loyalties torn between the Sterkarms, who think the "Elves" only wish to trade, and her employer, who wishes to exploit and subdue. These worlds collide disastrously when Per is critically wounded, and Andrea convinces Windsor, her boss, to bring him to the 21st side to receive life-saving treatment. Windsor sees an opportunity to hold Per hostage and thereby control the Sterkarms, and Per sees an elf trap from which he must escape at all cost, and worse: a clear picture of FUP's ruthless goals. Susan Price does a fine job presenting Andrea's moral dilemma -- neither side is perfect. The Sterkarms are vicious and violent, but also loving and loyal. The 21st century workers are exploitative and arrogant, but also people with families just doing their jobs. Unfortunately, all Andrea does with her moral and cultural dilemma is dither.

What rings true: the historical aspects of the story, and the Sterkarms. Windsor and FUP deride them as childish and barbarian, and they certainly act that way. They make agreements, but then cheerfully ignore them. But, as with dispossessed people anywhere and anytime, why shouldn't they look out for themselves? Also ringing true: the corporate greed of FUP. The 16th century is just there, ripe for the taking, and plans are underway to exploit the natural resources for unimaginable profit. Mentioned in passing: a similar operation underway in South America, where the company is now importing rare wood and other natural wonders. What rings false is the extreme caricature of the evil 21st century CEO. I could almost hear the melodramatic boos and forewarning piano music. Also ringing false was the romance between Andrea and Per. There wasn't much there except the author's word that they were in love, and much of their dialog was awkward and contrived.

I have trouble starring and rating books. I usually award either 5-stars, for those truly wonderful, best-of-the-year books, or 2-stars, for disappointing books. This book has enough good and not-so-good to be a solid 3-star read.

Price, S. (2003). The Sterkarm handshake. London: Point.
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I read this some years ago and was captivated, and a re-read hasn't disappointed. Somehow the time travel/science fiction aspect is convincing, leaving you to enjoy the love story and the moral choices and struggles the characters go through. Andrea has been sent through to the English/Scots borders in the 16th century to research the Sterkarms: violent outlaws or courteous hosts? Or both? But she falls in love with their son and heir Per, threatening her bosses' plans: to plunder the rich natural resources of the past.
Who is more violent and immoral, the reivers who give a home to a homeless man from the 21st century, or the moderns who still fight cruel wars, exterminate species, and are prepared to trick the men of the past into show more losing their heritage?
Marketed for teenagers, but I think it's more of an adult book. The 16thC parts seem very real; there's a lot of violence, yet you definitely want the Sterkarms to win; the moderns are mostly horrible, except Joe. Andrea can be irritatingly indecisive and weepy, but that's probably more realistic than a super-clever feisty heroine would have been.
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A really good romp, but obvious that there is a lot of thought and intelligence underpinning it, so a very satisfying read. The characters really come alive to me as the author treats them all as human individuals. No cardboard characters or stereotypes here. The time travel framework allows a great juxtaposition of two cultures. The 16th century and the 21st century passions work out wonderfully differently, yet splendidly the same, from the same stuff of human life. And good fun.
I love this book. It is classified as YA which I don't get. I think it works well as an adult book. Andrea is an anthropologist who time travels as part of a corporate plan to plunder the environmental riches of the past. But the plundering Sterkarm family is more than they bargained for, and Andrea finds that the mindset of the past is more welcoming to her than her current time. In the past she finds love, respect and acceptance. What will happen when she has to choose a side?
This book is so hard to promote to young people which is a crying shame as it's so amazing. A corrupt company has discovered the secret of time travel and is using it to plunder the past for mineral resources. But the Sterkarms, a Scottish border clan, are suspicious of the "Elves" that try to buy their co-operation with aspirin, and launch an all-out war on the 20th Century. This book has everything - shocks, romance, action - and is definitely one of my all-time favourites.
½
In the twenty-first century theres a scientific corporation who have found a way to send people back in time. They've found a place in the 16th Century that's ripe for plucking. The only problem are the Sterkarms. A feudal family stuck between England and Scotland they have no allegiances but to themselves. They have a majority of left-handed people and this is reflected in their castle.

They call the people from the 21st Century Elves because of their strange tools and clothing. Andrea is from the 21st Century and lives with them, both studying them as an anthropologist and as a employee of FUP. She's fallen for Per "the May" Sterkarm and is caught between the two centuries. When Per is injured she brings him to the 21st Century which show more sets in train a series of events that no-one expected.

It's a big fat fantasy book, and its very interesting and readable and I thoroughly enjoyed it. There were times when I had a bit of a lag but it kept me reading and interested.
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65+ Works 1,254 Members
Susan Price has always loved reading and telling stories. At the age of sixteen she published her first book, the Devil's Piper. Since then she's written more than thirty books. Ms. Price lives in the Black Country in the heart of England

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Edwards, Mark (Cover artist)
Rebenschied, Shane (Cover artist)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Sterkarm Handshake
Original title
The Sterkarm Handshake
Original publication date
1998
First words
From out of the surrounding hills came a ringing silence that was only deepened by the plodding of the pack-ponies' hooves on the turf and the flirting of their tails against their sides.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Teen, Young Adult
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PZ7 .P9317 .SLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

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367
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85,299
Reviews
12
Rating
(3.79)
Languages
7 — Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, German, Italian, Norwegian
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
18
ASINs
3