Song of Albion, Book 1: The Paradise War

by Stephen Lawhead

Hardcover, 1991

Status

Available

Call number

813.54

Publication

Lion Hudson Plc (1991), Edition: 1st Ed, Hardcover, 416 pages

Description

From the dreaming spires of Oxford, Lewis Gillies drives north to seek a mythical creature in a misty glen in Scotland. Expecting little more than a weekend diversion, Lewis finds himself in a mystical place where two worlds meet, in the time-between-times--and in the heart of a battle between good and evil. The ancient Celts admitted no separation between this world and the Otherworld: the two were delicately interwoven, each dependent on the other. The Paradise War crosses the thin places between this world and that, as Lewis Gillies comes face-to-face with an ancient mystery--and a cosmic catastrophe in the making.

User reviews

LibraryThing member reading_fox
The author's best work, a well crafted celtic trilogy. Should you impose your standards on another's way of life. What happens when your world overlaps theirs?
LibraryThing member willowcove
A wonderful retelling of a Celtic Myth, placing a modern-day person into the position of a mythological hero. Very good read. I do not however, understand where the "Christian Fiction" tag that some are using comes from.
LibraryThing member cherryblossommj
Well. I must admit I did return this to the library without finishing it. I kept reading and reading, almost to halfway through it just hoping for something to pick up and excite me. But it didn't... even when I got to the Otherworld. [author: Steven Lawhead] just did so much better with [book:
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Hood]. With [book: Hood] I was enraptured and in love with all the characters and events and could not read fast enough to get what was coming next. But perhaps it is because Hood was from last year (2006) where The Paradise War is from 1991, maybe Lawhead has just gotten better. Who knows. Either way, I do not really recommend this book. There are too many other, better things out there to read.
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LibraryThing member cherryblossommj
Well. I must admit I did return this to the library without finishing it. I kept reading and reading, almost to halfway through it just hoping for something to pick up and excite me. But it didn't... even when I got to the Otherworld. [author: Steven Lawhead] just did so much better with [book:
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Hood]. With [book: Hood] I was enraptured and in love with all the characters and events and could not read fast enough to get what was coming next. But perhaps it is because Hood was from last year (2006) where The Paradise War is from 1991, maybe Lawhead has just gotten better. Who knows. Either way, I do not really recommend this book. There are too many other, better things out there to read.
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LibraryThing member jadelson6
Good story, but gets dragged down at times by pompous dialogue. Not very suspenseful due to repeated predictable pattern in which everything seems lost and then the hero figures out a solution. I enjoyed it but am not motivated to read the rest of the trilogy.
LibraryThing member ctmskaor
Lewis was an English graduate in Oxford. But all of that changed when he stepped into the beautiful world of Albion.
The Paradise War was a very good read. It was difficult, but very fun. You start out reading about his arrival, then you get into his travels in Ynys Sci. There he meets the lovely
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Gwenllian, and her other two sisters, Goewyn and Govan. He goes through many adventures, and meets many new people. This book is very good and I recommend it to any mature readers who like to read.
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LibraryThing member jramoly
Such a wonderful beginning to the trilogy! History and "magical" spins to it really excite me in books, and Lawhead is an expert! This entire trilogy is woven with such talent that you really begin to feel like Albion really is a place lost in time. Finding books that are truly Christian fiction in
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this manner is difficult, because the religious undertones are hidden and truly so essential to the tale that you almost do not realize they are there! There was so much going on in these books that reading them for a second and third time truly only brought out more details and perfect writing subtlety that the average reader misses on the first run.
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LibraryThing member JeremyPreacher
As much as I love the Pendragon Cycle, I think an argument could be made that The Paradise War is a stronger story. It's very nearly as archetypal - modern man finds a path into magical land of legend, saves world, etc - but the tensions set up between the two modern characters, the well-executed
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portrayal of the seductiveness of a world that accepts you as you are, and the mythic, if somewhat muddled, climax create a cohesive and compelling narrative. It does not stand on its own - the ending is a cliffhanger - but it holds together well.
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LibraryThing member jjvors
The Paradise War by Stephen Lawhead, introduced me to Mr. Lawhead and I've been a devoted fan ever since. In this book, he imagines a parallel universe, connected by ancient cairns to England. The hero goes in and finds Albion, an idealization of England at its best. Life is more vivid, more
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beautiful, more breathtaking. The women are more beautiful, the men nobler, the kings more majestic. There are problems in paradise though. An ancient enemy reawakes and causes devastation. Since this world and our world are connected, disaster in one causes disaster in another. To solve the problems, an Oxford graduate student must change completely and become more than he ever imagined he could be.
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LibraryThing member Xleptodactylous
The storyline and premise was interesting to begin with: an extinct animal found in Scotland to the delight of a bored, young privileged man at Oxford and then a meeting with the Green Man. However delightful the story may seem, however, the writing must carry it almost singularly, and it certainly
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did not. There was too much Wilde-esque whinging from the Brit, too much 'meh' and slowness from the Yank and nothing particularly happening.
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LibraryThing member electrascaife
Two Oxford grad students find a portal between worlds in the shape of a cairn and find themselves (first one, then the other a few weeks later, which translates to years in the other world) pulled into a world inhabited by, essentially, ancient celts, and then entangled in the warrior ranks and
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embroiled in a semi-mystical war that may have repercussions in the 'real' world.
This one started out promising but once it transitioned to the other world, it faltered into a big load of meh. The main character/narrator was completely lacking in any sort of personality, so I struggled to care about what happened to him, and the plot was both convoluted and dull. Disappointing. Needless to mention, but I won't be continuing with the trilogy.
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Language

Original publication date

1991-05

Physical description

416 p.; 8.4 inches

ISBN

0745918506 / 9780745918501

Local notes

Lewis Gillies is an American graduate student in Oxford who should be getting on with his life. Yet for some reason, he finds himself speeding north with his roommate Simon on a lark--half-heartedly searching for a long-extinct creature allegedly spotted in a misty glen in Scotland. Expecting little more than a weekend diversion, Lewis accidently crosses through a mystical gateway where two worlds meet: into the time-between-times, as the ancient Celts called it. And into the heart of a collision between good and evil that's been raging since long before Lewis was born.

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