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The Talisman

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About this listen

The Crusaders, led by Richard I of England, are encamped in the Holy Land, and torn by the dissensions and jealousies of the leaders, including, besides Coeur de Lion himself, Philip of France, the duke of Austria, the Marquis of Montferrat, and the Grand Master of the Templars. The army's impotence is accentuated by the illness of Richard.

A poor but doughty Scottish crusader, known as Sir Kenneth or the Knight of the Leopard, on a mission far from the camp encounters a Saracen emir, with whom, after an inconclusive combat, he strikes up a friendship. This emir proves subsequently to be Saladin himself, and he presently appears in the Christian camp in the disguise of a physician sent by the Soldan to Richard, whom he quickly cures.

Meanwhile, Sir Kenneth is lured from his post by Queen Berengaria, Richard's wife, who in a frolic sends him an urgent message purporting to come from Edith Plantagenet, for whom Sir Kenneth has a romantic attachment. During his brief absence, his faithful hound is wounded and the English flag torn down. Sir Kenneth, thus dishonored, narrowly escapes execution at Richard's order by the intervention of the Moorish physician, who receives him as his slave. Kindly and honorably treated by Saladin, he is sent, in the disguise of a black mute attendant, to Richard, whom he saves from assassination. Richard pierces Kenneth's disguise and gives him the opportunity he desires of discovering who wounded the hound and tore down the standard.

As the Christian princes and their forces file past the re-erected standard, the hound springs on Conrade of Montferrat and tears him from his horse. A trial by combat is arranged in which Sir Kenneth defeats and wounds Montferrat, and is revealed to be Prince David of Scotland. The obstacle that his supposed lowly birth presented to his union with Edith Plantagenet is thus removed.

Originally published in the United States, 1929; (P)2002 Blackstone Audiobooks
Classics Genre Fiction Historical Fiction Literary Fiction Fiction Royalty Middle Ages England Crusade

Critic reviews

"In narrating the romance, Robert Whitfield excels at phrasing, which, accompanied by his pleasant voice and British accent, makes this tape pleasant listening." ( AudioFile)
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The best Scott novel to read or listen too first.
Try Quentin Durward as a follow-up. Many of the others start with 30+ pages of introductory description and scene setting. You meet the main characters in a desert scrap early in this novel.... much easier to learn the wonderful pace and description of Scott after such a start.

I enjoyed the narration which I found comfortable and well paced.

Really enjoyed revisiting an old friend.

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Good story well narrated. If only the historic Richard Lionheart was anything like this.

Fun little tale

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Exciting tale of chivalry and treachery during a truce between Crusaders and Saracens. Intrigue romance and surprises mixed together make this intoxicating tale.

High Drama in Desert

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Walter Scott is much less popular than many other 19th century authors in English, such as Dickens, Trollope, Gaskell, Hardy etc and I listened to this partly to see why not.
Pretty obvious, given the arcane and almost wilfully obscure vocabulary ( I suspect that earlier readers relished this very quality as a sign of refinement),and priggish pomposity of most of the characters.
Arguably it is no more or less accurate that the majority of 'historical' fiction, which betrays more about the values of it times and its author than about the events depicted (see, he's got me at it now!) but I found the style very turgid. And if we are going to get formal about things, far to many sentences that end in prepositions, and an irritating assumption that even a reader, rather than a listener, cannot keep track of a dialogue between two characters without being prompted with some verbose reminder of their identity at every line. A modern copy editor would have no truck with what would now be regarded as clumsy over-writing.
Having said that, the narrator's verbal style matches the text, and he does a good job with differentiating the characters. But life is real too short for this, given that so many other period authors are so much better. Back to Elliot, says I

Interesting as a historical literary artefact

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Fantastic story even though it is wordy in parts. The reading performance was fantastic and made it very enjoyable.

Enjoyable performance

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