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The Pillars of the Earth

The Pillars of the Earth Review


by Ken Follett



Overall 4.79 of 5 view all 24 reviews




Publisher's CirclePublisher's Circle
Nicole
Austin, TX
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Forget Follett's thrillers - go with Pillars!
5 star rating

a fan of clever plots, avid reader, character-lover, fiction reader, history buff
Pros

    Intricate, Sweeping Plot, Complex, Well-Drawn Characters, Follows The History Of The Time, Superbly Written, Flawless Pacing And Plot-Juggling


AUG
28
2007

The Case

Ken Follett is known for his thrillers. He loves to write the spy stories! But with The Pillars of the Earth, Follett ventured from his normal venue of espionage and intrigue and took the historical fiction world by storm. It was a daring move. As Follett himself has said, "In the book business, when you have had a success, the smart thing to do is write the same sort of thing once a year for the rest of your life...I should not have risked my reputation writing something out of character and overambitious."

Pillars could have been lauded as the biggest mistake of his career. It could have been terrible. It could have been disastrous. It could have been embarassing. It could have been all of those things and more, but it wasn't. Put quite simply, Pillars was, and is, a masterpiece. (It's also Follett's best-selling novel to date!)

The Plot (Spoiler-free!)

Pillars opens in the year 1123, at a hanging. The whole town turns out to see the event, though no one knows the condemned. A knight, a monk, and a priest also attend, and while there, they are cursed by a small woman imbued with malice, scorn, and an odd sense of righteousness...

Fast forward twelve years. We meet Tom Builder - a mason on the hunt for work - and his family: wife Agnes, son Alfred, and little daughter Martha. We meet William Hamleigh, the only son of a corrupt lord and his loathsome wife. We meet Aliena and Richard, children of Bartholomew, Earl of Shiring. We meet Ellen and Jack, castaways from society. And we meet Philip, a humble monk who is trying his best to serve God in a time rife with strife and godlessness.

Over the course of more than 50 years, these characters' paths will merge, tangle, clash, and swirl as their stories weave and intertwine with the construction of a true architectural feat: the medieval gothic cathedral. They will change the course of each others' lives, and they will set the stage for one of the grandest sagas of historical fiction ever written.

The Good

I hope you're aware by now that this is my favorite book of all time. Period. Words like 'brilliant,' 'flawless,' and 'phenomenal' don't quite do it justice. It must be read to be appreciated. And no matter what you like to read, Pillars will have it. Danger, mystery, passion, horror, intrigue, romance, drama, action, scope, you'll get it all. Honestly, I've never heard a bad word uttered about this book, and I don't foresee it happening anytime soon, either. If there's one word that fits, it's 'satisfying.'

The plot is intricate, sprawling, complex, tightly crafted, and seamlessly interwoven throughout the years and decades of the story. The characters are just as rich and deeply layered as the saga they create. The pacing is superb, the writing is solid and easy to read, and the backdrop upon which the story plays out is surprisingly accurate when it comes to the history of the period.

Basically, The Pillars of the Earth freakin' rocks!

The Bad

It ended.

The Verdict

Five stars! If there's only one more book you read in this lifetime, make it The Pillars of the Earth!

Last edited on Aug 28, 2007


I_thumb_up The Pillars of the Earth is recommended by Nicole


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I_comment_shdw24 Comments about Nicole’s Review



Rakesh wrote on Apr 23, 2008 at 12:30AM


nothing


Little-Mo wrote on Nov 15, 2007 at 7:31PM


As someone else commented, I was going to write a review when I saw yours there, and I must say that I agree with you on ALL points. If there was a way to make the scale from one to five escalate to a ten, that wouldn't be enough for that book. GREAT review, for one of the best books of all time!


tina257 wrote on Nov 13, 2007 at 10:46AM


I was going to write a review, but yours is so thorough and well written that I can't add anything. I picked up this book on a whim since I was not really interested in his usual spy stories, but I'm glad I did because I completely agree with you that it's worth reading, especially if you like epics and I think it may be his best. I loved this book as much as you did and am thrilled he's writing a sequel. (even though the characters will have to be new, I'm sure I'll love them just as much)