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Ken follett notre dame review
Ken follett notre dame review









ken follett notre dame review

When Tom, a master builder, arrives with his family, he and prior Philip soon discover they share the same dream: to build the biggest cathedral in the whole of England. In 12th-century England, we travel to Kingsbridge, a village with a church that has seen better days. But for those of you who don’t (and because I always start my reviews with it), here’s what this book is about. Some of you may know The Pillars of the Earth from the TV show with Eddie Redmayne and Hayley Atwell.

ken follett notre dame review

Today’s review is one of the latter, it’s the monumental The Pillars of the Earth, by Ken Follett! When I do, I often end up reading adult romances, or historical fiction. But every now and then, I like to switch things up and pick up a different genre.

ken follett notre dame review

Review first published in the Cape Times on 27 March 2020.As you all know, I mainly read Young Adult fantasy novels. Notre-Dame: A Short History of the Meaning of Cathedrals The slim, beautifully produced book conveys Follett’s passion for the subject matter and explains why so many of us wept when we saw Our Lady of Paris burning. In 1944, it was the backdrop of a “masterpiece of political theatre” as General de Gaulle ended a victory march at the cathedral. And literature – novels like Victor Hugo’s Notre-Dame de Paris (1831) – spread the building’s fame across the world. Women and foreigners played vital roles in the construction – it was an international effort of note. It was built before standardised measurements, modern mathematics, efficient tools, and with hardly any safety regulations. “How did such majestic beauty arise out of the violence and filth of the Middle Ages?” Follett asks and illuminates the cathedral’s many wonders.

ken follett notre dame review

The history of this popular site of pilgrimage is astounding. “Notre-Dame had always seemed eternal, and the medieval builders certainly thought it would last until the Judgement Day but suddenly we saw that it could be destroyed”, he writes in the opening pages of the book. All the royalties generated by the book go to the charity La Fondation du Patrimoine.įollett’s brief account of Notre-Dame’s eight-centuries-long existence is informative and touching. Not an expert on cathedrals, but known across the world for his The Pillars of the Earth, a novel about the construction of a cathedral for which he did an enormous amount of research, he became the media’s go-to person for commentary about the Notre-Dame fire and, together with his French publisher, decided to write Notre-Dame: A Short History of the Meaning of Cathedrals to support the reconstruction efforts of the architectural treasure after the catastrophe. The feeling was bewildering, as if the earth was shaking”, writes Ken Follett about watching the Notre-Dame Cathedral burning on 15 April last year. “Something priceless was dying in front of our eyes.











Ken follett notre dame review