Particularize Regarding Books Enemy of God (The Arthur Books #2)
Title | : | Enemy of God (The Arthur Books #2) |
Author | : | Bernard Cornwell |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Special Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 397 pages |
Published | : | March 15th 1998 by St. Martin's Griffin (first published 1996) |
Categories | : | Historical. Historical Fiction. Fantasy. Fiction. Mythology. Arthurian |

Bernard Cornwell
Paperback | Pages: 397 pages Rating: 4.39 | 17405 Users | 628 Reviews
Explanation As Books Enemy of God (The Arthur Books #2)
4.5/5 Stars Enemy of God, the second book in 'The Warlord Chronicles' trilogy by Bernard Cornwell, and the series so far, has truly been serendipity for me. As I mentioned in my previous review, I’ve never bothered to start Cornwell’s work, it brings me joy when someone, a friend (even better again when it’s from one of your favorite authors) recommended a book/series to you and you loved it. That’s truly how I feel about the trilogy so far, Cornwell again compelled me with his original and haunting retelling of an Arthurian saga full of heroism and tragedy. The now monk and Christian, Derfel Cadarn continues telling his tale to Igraine, his current Queen about his time as a Pagan, a time when he was called Lord Derfel Cadarn, Derfel the Mighty, Champion of Dumnonia and the beloved friend of Arthur. Derfel’s tale in Enemy of God begins in the year 495 AD, 15 years after the beginning of his tale in The Winter King and continues immediately from the aftermath of the last battle in the previous book. Most of the plot in the book focused on Merlin’s hunt for the Cauldron of Clyddno Eiddyn (or in modern names, the Holy Grail), driving back the Saxon, Camelot (Arthur’s glorious years of rule) and eventually, why Arthur earned the title ‘The Enemy of God, all told masterfully from Derfel’s 1st person omniscient-ish narrative.“To hear the tales told at night-time hearths you would think we had made a whole new country in Britain, named it Camelot and peopled it with shining heroes, but the truth is that we simply ruled Dumnonia as best we could, we ruled it justly and we never called it Camelot”A lot of heavy realistic topics were brought upon in this book. One of the most memorable moments being the complication to choose friendships or to uphold law and oath in the name of peace, even when you know the decision is wrong. On instincts, I’ll always choose friendship but what if, by choosing to save that friend, you risk killing millions of people? Will you still go through with it? Or will you follow the law, saving millions of people’s lives that you don’t know in exchange of your loyal friend’s existence?
“Arthur did try to change the world and his instrument was love”That topic is very well written but imo, the best part of the book lies on another realistic topic and definitely the factor with the strongest emphasis, religion, specifically on Christianity, Pagan and the mystery of the Goddess, Isis.
“It's only when you're lost and frightened and in the dark that you call on the Gods, and they like us to call on them. It makes them feel powerful, and that's why they like us to live in chaos.”The entire discussion and conflict on religions are very thought provoking. It made me think a lot on faith and afterlife, which honestly, unsettled me a bit. This goes to show just how well written this book is. There is a sense of hope, glory, friendship, and loss that were told. While the first half is still slow paced, the pacing is much more balanced now compared to the previous book where the first half was so dense with descriptions and minim dialogues. The second half has faster paced, the last two chapters (more or less the last 60 pages of the book), in particular, were damn thrilling despite having only a small amount of actions. I honestly don’t know how I can tell you just how well written this book is. It’s simple, beautiful, haunting, and vivid. Although every chapter is still very long, with 13 chapters out of 470 pages, it never felt like a slog going through it because Cornwell’s prose worked so well for me. The only minor con I had with the book is that I find myself a bit disappointed by the lack of battle scenes in it. It’s the second book already and I still haven’t seen any of Cornwell’s supposedly memorable battle scenes. This doesn’t mean the book isn’t thrilling or filled with suspense at all, the second half of the book was so addictive and thrilling despite having minimum actions as I mentioned. However, I came into this series expecting to see a lot of war scenes but haven’t seen any yet aside from the climax in book 1, which was still too short for my taste. Do note that this is just a minor con due to my expectation, for the quality of the storytelling solely never fails to captivate me. Enemy of God is a fantastic sequel to bridge the gap towards the final book in the trilogy, 'Excalibur.' I love the previous book, love this one even more and I hope the last one will continue the same tradition. I totally recommend this for any lover of historical fiction and Arthurian saga. You can find this and the rest of my Adult Epic/High Fantasy & Sci-Fi reviews at BookNest
Declare Books Conducive To Enemy of God (The Arthur Books #2)
Original Title: | Enemy of God |
ISBN: | 0312187149 (ISBN13: 9780312187149) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | The Arthur Books #2, The Warlord Chronicles #2 |
Characters: | Galahad, Morgan Gatewood, Merlin, Sir Lancelot, Sir Mordred, Issa, Aelle, Ceinwyn, Derfel, Sansum, Queen Guinevere, King Arthur |
Rating Regarding Books Enemy of God (The Arthur Books #2)
Ratings: 4.39 From 17405 Users | 628 ReviewsNotice Regarding Books Enemy of God (The Arthur Books #2)
Excellent story, a 4.5 rating. This is the second in a King Arthur/Camelot trilogy; when I wanted to immerse myself in the Arthur legends, I went not for literary or fantasy but to a favorite historical novelist and was not disappointed. Story is told by a very old man in a monastery, Derfel,looking back on his life as a pagan lord and champion of Arthur. Several themes running this novel -- it is a changing world and the Britons are struggling to hold on to their lands against the everI have yet to read a really good book by Bernard Cornwell; but he's never failed to entertain me, either. Every book of his that I've read could fit into this one generic Cornwell review:Characters: good, but curiously blind in the places where the plot calls for them to miss something.Historical Detail: excellent, immersive, impressive.Plot: frustratingly obvious.Pacing: excellent, if predictable.Style: solid, literate, unchallenging.I guess it's the way it's going to be, if you write as many
Book 1: 3*Book 2: 3.5*'sThis darker and less romanticized view of Camelot picked up speed in book two. I've grown to enjoy more and more this version of the characters and especially the view of Lancelot and Guinevere who definitely don't come out smelling like roses.The clash between the Britons and the Saxons also escalates as does the pagans vs the Christians which in some ways the story starts to form if not a prelude at least a precursor to the Saxon Stories series. This series is being

The second book in the Arthur series, this book tells of how Arthurs fragile peace was broken by Lancelots deal with Cerdic, the Saxon raider, and how Arthur discovered Lancelots treachery with Guinevere. The narrator Derfels story is also fraught with drama; Cornwell knows how to make the reader hate villains (treachery is the trick, it seems, judging from this and the Sharpe series) and yearn for their comeuppance.Again, this is a very expertly realized historical guess at Camelot (a word not
The second book in the Arthur series, this book tells of how Arthurs fragile peace was broken by Lancelots deal with Cerdic, the Saxon raider, and how Arthur discovered Lancelots treachery with Guinevere. The narrator Derfels story is also fraught with drama; Cornwell knows how to make the reader hate villains (treachery is the trick, it seems, judging from this and the Sharpe series) and yearn for their comeuppance.Again, this is a very expertly realized historical guess at Camelot (a word not
Want an Arthurian legend with grit? With raw human emotion? With unexpected betrayals and intrigue? Here you go.This is the second in the Arthur/Warlord trilogy and keeps the same momentum started in The Winter King. It could almost have ended here. You could stop after this and have a satisfying saga.But who would want to? There's still one book to go.
4.5/5 StarsEnemy of God, the second book in 'The Warlord Chronicles' trilogy by Bernard Cornwell, and the series so far, has truly been serendipity for me.As I mentioned in my previous review, Ive never bothered to start Cornwells work, it brings me joy when someone, a friend (even better again when its from one of your favorite authors) recommended a book/series to you and you loved it. Thats truly how I feel about the trilogy so far, Cornwell again compelled me with his original and haunting
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