The Face of the Waters

by Simon Raven

The First-Born of Egypt (2)

43 Members 1 Review ½ (3.71)

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This is the second volume of Simon Raven's 'First Born of Egypt' series. Marius Stern, the wayward son of Gregory Stern, has survived earlier escapades and is safely back at prep school - assisted by his father's generous contribution to the school's new shooting range. Fielding Gray and Jeremy Morrison are returning home via Venice, where they encounter the friar, Piero, an ex-male whore and a figure from a shared but distant past. Back in England, at the Wiltshire family home, Lord show more Canteloupe is restless. He finds his calm disturbed by events: the arrival of Piero; Jeremy's father's threat to saddle his son with the responsibility of the family estate; and the dramatic resistance of Gregory Stern to attempted blackmail. show less

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2 reviews
The second book in the First-born of Egypt series takes up the story a couple of months after the end of Morning star. As in the first book, Raven has a lot of balls to keep up in the air at once, with six or seven different, interwoven story lines that come together in a splendidly grand-guignol finale in a Venetian church.

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51+ Works 1,788 Members
Simon Arthur Noel Raven, December 28, 1927 - May 19, 2001. Simon Raven was born in London on December 28, 1927. His father was independently wealthy from Raven's grandfathers death and his mother was a cross country runner who was once the second fastest woman in England. Raven attended Charterhouse, an exclusive private school which he was show more expelled from for homosexual activities. He spent some time in the army before heading off to Cambridge where his obvious intelligence was rewarded with a research scholarship to study the influence of the classics on Victorian schools. Eventually the scholarship money ran out, causing Raven to re-enlist in the army, where he served in Germany and Kenya. During his tour, Raven racked up serious gambling debts and the army eventually allowed him to resign rather than face court martial. In 1963, Raven told a publisher about his idea for his famous "Oblivion" series and signed a deal for 5,000 pounds for the entire collection. Raven also dramatized novels and plays for television and constantly chased after money. Raven wrote 36 novels in the satirical style, usually about homosexuality in upperclass English society. He died May 19, 2001 at a London hospital, the cause was unknown. He was 73. show less

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Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR6068 .A9 .F33Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000
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Reviews
1
Rating
½ (3.71)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
3