The Saracen Blade
by Frank Yerby
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The Saracen Blade is the story of Pietro di Donati, son of a 13th-century Sicilian peasant. Born at almost the exact same moment as the Emperor Frederick, Pietro’s fate is loosely linked with his. The story is set against the backdrop of the crusades, and we even get to see some of the current events of the time, especially the Children’s Crusade and the Albigensian Crusade. Simon de Montfort even makes a cameo at one point, but be aware that he doesn't come across so well.
It’s a thick, dense novel, despite how short it is (there are even footnotes, which detracts from the flow of the story). It starts off very slowly, and it took me about fifty pages or so to get into the flow of the story. Pietro is a pretty dense, show more incomprehensible character, and he seems even callous at times (especially when he leaves his first wife, a wet noodle I just couldn't care for, either). I loved the historical backdrop, but I wasn’t quite as attached to Pietro as I wanted to be. He just didn’t leap off the page for me, and his friendship with the Emperor stretched credibility.
I loved the historical setting, since Frank Yerby describes everything so well; but his prose is, as I’ve said, dense and hard to follow at times; but at others, he tends to get a bit over-dramatic. I enjoyed the love story between Pietro and Iolanthe, but it mostly got lost in the amount of historical details that Yerby gives his reader. show less
It’s a thick, dense novel, despite how short it is (there are even footnotes, which detracts from the flow of the story). It starts off very slowly, and it took me about fifty pages or so to get into the flow of the story. Pietro is a pretty dense, show more incomprehensible character, and he seems even callous at times (especially when he leaves his first wife, a wet noodle I just couldn't care for, either). I loved the historical backdrop, but I wasn’t quite as attached to Pietro as I wanted to be. He just didn’t leap off the page for me, and his friendship with the Emperor stretched credibility.
I loved the historical setting, since Frank Yerby describes everything so well; but his prose is, as I’ve said, dense and hard to follow at times; but at others, he tends to get a bit over-dramatic. I enjoyed the love story between Pietro and Iolanthe, but it mostly got lost in the amount of historical details that Yerby gives his reader. show less
I was very young when I first read this book, and it was there. A simple revenge tale, set in the 1200's in the Mediterranean, it was made into a simple minded movie of the same name. It's a bodice ripper, and set some guide lines for the genre.
La acción de esta novela se desarrolla en el siglo XIII, y en ella vemos desplegadas las banderas de los torneos, en un mundo de damas de largos cabellos recogidos, vestidos de seda, terciopelo y armiño y nobles cubiertos de joyas. Y, en violento contraste con este fasto y esplendor, el mundo de los siervos y esclavos, en el que nació Pietro Donati, viajero infatigable, mimado por las mujeres y cuya inteligencia es tan sutil y penetrante como una afilada hoja sarracena.
Nov 16, 2022Spanish
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Publisher's Weekly Bestsellers - Part II - 1940 - 1979
355 works; 5 members
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- Canonical title
- The Saracen Blade
- Original title
- The Saracen Blade
- Original publication date
- 1952
- First words
- From where they stood, they could see the castle.
- Original language
- English
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- Members
- 235
- Popularity
- 137,999
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.50)
- Languages
- English, German, Spanish
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 7
- ASINs
- 17





























































