The Wanderer's Necklace
by H. Rider Haggard
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When you're in the mood for a classic tale of action-adventure, an H. Rider Haggard novel is always a safe bet. The Wanderer's Necklace contains all of elements that gained Haggard legions of fans and lasting literary acclaim: perilous adventures in an exotic foreign land, a dash of romance, and a brave hero who stares down adversity and doesn't flinch..
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This is old-fashioned adventure with an emphasis on old fashioned. I'm not going to claim that Haggard even at his best is the same order of classic as the best by Charles Dickens, the Brontes, George Eliot or Thomas Hardy. But like fellow Victorians Arthur Conan Doyle or Robert Louis Stevenson or Rudyard Kipling, Haggard really could spin a good yarn, and the fantasy genre in general owes him a great debt. Ten of his books are on my bookshelves. I gobbled those up in my teens and most I remember very, very well even decades later. My favorite of his novels involve Ayesha, known as She-Who-Must-Be-Obeyed, especially the book Wisdom's Daughter. But, this is definitely one of the others I found greatly enjoyable, and Olaf is one of show more Haggard's most memorable heroes--again, old-fashioned, in good senses and bad. The sensibilities and stereotypes in Haggard's books are going to scrape against modern, politically correct sentiments--but they also present a hero for whom words like "duty" and "honor" aren't quaint relics--and there's more imagination and daring do in a novel like this one than you'll find in any ten published in fantasy today. Colorful is how I'd put it, at times bordering on the purple, but certainly not dull. show less
I read this about 40 years ago, so my memory is spotty, but it involves a Viking Varangian at the court of the Empress Irene c.800. One singular aspect is that Frederick Rolfe wrote a more fantastic (and to my mind more enjoyable) sequel, The Weird of the Wanderer.
Questo è uno dei tanti libri adocchiati per caso che ha finito per stupirmi. Iniziato in sordina, ha finito per conquistarmi e farsi divorare fino all'ultima parola.
Come da titolo, il protagonista è Olaf, vichingo tutto d'un pezzo per il quale il Fato avrà in serbo grandi gioie e grandi dolori. Olaf non è uomo da scendere a compromessi ed è sincero anche a scapito della sua sicurezza personale. È uno di quegli uomini per i quali vale il motto: meglio morto che senza onore. Uno di quelli per i quali la parola data è sacra e inviolabile e che non tradirebbe mai i propri principi.
Olaf è un tipo vecchio stampo e anche il libro che parla di lui ha un sapore antico, il sapore dei vecchi poemi eroici, dove il Fato spinge verso il loro show more destino gli uomini, che possono soltanto scegliere di affrontarlo a testa alta o voltargli vigliaccamente le spalle, per poi essere colpiti dall'infamia.
Grandiosa e commovente, la storia di Olaf ci mostrerà la forza della rettitudine, una forza capace di dare a un uomo il coraggio di affrontare la propria sorte anche dopo aver perso tutto ciò che lo aveva definito fino a quel momento. show less
Come da titolo, il protagonista è Olaf, vichingo tutto d'un pezzo per il quale il Fato avrà in serbo grandi gioie e grandi dolori. Olaf non è uomo da scendere a compromessi ed è sincero anche a scapito della sua sicurezza personale. È uno di quegli uomini per i quali vale il motto: meglio morto che senza onore. Uno di quelli per i quali la parola data è sacra e inviolabile e che non tradirebbe mai i propri principi.
Olaf è un tipo vecchio stampo e anche il libro che parla di lui ha un sapore antico, il sapore dei vecchi poemi eroici, dove il Fato spinge verso il loro show more destino gli uomini, che possono soltanto scegliere di affrontarlo a testa alta o voltargli vigliaccamente le spalle, per poi essere colpiti dall'infamia.
Grandiosa e commovente, la storia di Olaf ci mostrerà la forza della rettitudine, una forza capace di dare a un uomo il coraggio di affrontare la propria sorte anche dopo aver perso tutto ciò che lo aveva definito fino a quel momento. show less
Aug 28, 2023Italian
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283+ Works 18,853 Members
Sir Henry Rider Haggard (1856-1925) is best remembered for his 34 adventure fantasy novels set in exotic locations. As a child, Haggard, whose father was an English barrister, was considered dim-witted and was inclined to daydreaming. His parents ended his formal education when he was seventeen, and he was sent to work in South Africa, where his show more imagination was inspired by the people, animals, and jungle. He became close friends with authors Rudyard Kipling and Andrew Lang. Haggard's most popular books are King Solomon's Mines (1886) and She (1887). He also wrote short stories, as well as nonfiction on topics such as gardening, English farming, and rural life, interests which led to duties on government commissions concerned with land maintenance. For his literary contributions and his government service, Haggard was knighted in 1912. Several of Haggard's novels have been filmed. She was filmed in 1965, starring Ursula Andress. King Solomon's Mines was filmed with Stewart Granger and Deborah Kerr in 1950, and again with Richard Chamberlain and Sharon Stone in 1985. Also, the novel Allan Quatermain was filmed as Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold with Richard Chamberlain and Sharon Stone in 1986. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Belongs to Publisher Series
Henry Rider Haggard (Band 07)
Heyne Science Fiction & Fantasy (06/4136)
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title*
- Das Halsband des Wanderers
- Original title
- The Wanderer's Necklace
- Original publication date
- 1914
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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- Reviews
- 3
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- (3.81)
- Languages
- English, German, Italian
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 49
- ASINs
- 12



























































