![]() Cornwell's portrayal of life and death in ancient Britain is graphic, gritty and riveting. ![]() Murder, magic and misery prevail, and there is no shortage of victims or bloodshed. It is Camaban's idea to build Stonehenge as a temple to create balance between the moon god and the sun god, to eliminate winter and force a change in the circle of life. The story covers nearly 20 years as the brothers and the people of Ratharryn struggle to survive as a tribe, fighting harsh weather and starvation, warring with other tribes and trying to appease their angry gods. The youngest sibling, Saban, will ultimately construct the temple, but not until he has endured torture, slavery and betrayal. As a warrior and tyrant, his brutality is second only to that of his crippled brother, Camaban, a sorcerer ruthlessly determined to have a massive stone temple erected to honor his authority. Lengar, the eldest, murders his own father to become the chief of his tribe. It features three brothers linked by blood but divided by madness, jealousy and lust for power. ![]() This wild tale, rich with sorcery, pagan ritual, greed and intrigue, is Cornwell's most ambitious fiction yet. Now he imaginatively unlocks the mystery of Stonehenge's creation in 2000 B.C., at the beginning of Britain's Bronze Age. ![]() Prolific British author Cornwell is best known for his Napoleonic warfare adventure series with Captain Richard Sharpe, and for the Starbuck Chronicles, about the American Civil War. ![]()
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