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The Shining Company

Rosemary Sutcliff

$34.99

Paperback

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English
Red Fox
02 August 1991
An absorbing historical tale of bravery and friendship, set around 600 AD.

'I saw riders with black eyesockets in glimmering mail where their faces should have been, grey wolfskins catching a bloom of light from the mist and the moon; a shining company indeed, not quite mortal-seeming.' Many years after King Arthur defeated the Saxons, the tribes of Britain are again threatened by invaders. Prosper and his loyal bondsman, Conn, answer the call of King Mynydogg to join a highly skilled army - the Shining Company. Led by the gallant Prince Gorthyrn, the company embark on a perilous but glorious campaign. An epic tale of battles and bravery from the acclaimed historical storyteller, Rosemary Sutcliff.
By:  
Imprint:   Red Fox
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Height: 178mm,  Width: 110mm,  Spine: 18mm
Weight:   164g
ISBN:   9780099855804
ISBN 10:   0099855801
Pages:   240
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   10+
Audience:   General/trade ,  9-11 years ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Reviews for The Shining Company

Around A.D. 600, King Mynyddog gathered 300 warriors for a year's training in what is now Edinburgh, then sent them to fight the Anglo-Saxon settlers to the south. One of the few survivors was Aneirin, a harper whose epic about the mission's heroes is the earliest surviving North British poem. Prosper, shieldbearer (squire) to one of the company and one of the few fictional characters among the historical figures here, narrates his own involvement in the tragic venture from the healing distance of a time years later, when he is in Constantinople. Sutcliff is at her superlative best here. She combines impeccable research with extraordinary imaginative power - mingling recorded fact with logically extended details of what might have happened. With subtle dexterity, she reveals and builds character through action and shapes exquisite, dramatic vignettes that are intrinsic to the story's web of tragic irony. In gracefully cadenced prose, never marred by sensationalism or false heroism, she re-creates the horrors of hand-to-hand combat and vividly evokes the rivalries and loyalties of men whose joys and hopes she makes kin to our own. Her lucid, precise language echoes the long ago ( mind for remember ) without a hint of obscurity or the falsely quaint. Her many memorable portraits include the well-meaning king, unable to extricate himself from a cruel dilemma (he was not Artos ); Cynan, traumatized hero-survivor; and the bard, who reluctantly escapes the suicidal last stand in order to bear witness. A splendid achievement. (Kirkus Reviews)


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