Reviews

Die Priesterin Von Avalon by Marion Balkenhol, Marion Zimmer Bradley

mitch65's review against another edition

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5.0

This was my second time reading this book. I love all of the Bradley/Paxson Avalon series, and I enjoyed this book just as much this time as I did the first!

adametokillfor's review against another edition

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adventurous dark informative mysterious reflective slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.5

evaserrate's review against another edition

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4.0

More Roman, I think than the rest. Excellent story.

aurumora's review

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4.0

Die Priesterin von Avalon ist Eilan und hier erfährt der Leser ihre Lebensgeschichte und ein Teil der Geschichte Roms. Das Imperium unter der Konstantinschen Herrschaft ist groß. So durchreist der Leser viele Länder. Es geht hauptsächlich um die Findung und Prägung der Religion.

Drei Gründe warum man dieses Buch lesen sollte:
- man liebt eine ruhige ausformulierte Atmosphäre
- das magische oder göttliche Denken zieht dich an
- ein reiches und volles Leben fasziniert sich

Speziell bei diesem Buch gibt es die Diskussion. um den Wechsel der Autorin, da M. Z. Breadly verstorben ist. Ich finde definitiv nicht, dass dies ein schlechtes Buch ist - troß der Tatsche, dass es von jemand anderem vollendet wurde. Ich kann keinen Vergleich ziehen zu der vorherigen Autorin. Dennoch es ist einfach ein ruhiges Buch mit einer unglaublichen Stimmung. Dieses Buch kann man meiner Meinung nach ruhig auch als Einzelband lesen und genießen.

Die Bild am Sonntag-ausgabe:
enthält 4 Bilder, die nicht der Rede Wert sind. Sie sind teilweise auch etwas Pixelig.

jcayala76's review against another edition

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inspiring mysterious slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

3.0

enydarwenn's review against another edition

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3.0

It is quite obvious that Bradley turned to Christianity when she started writing this book, but it turned out very beautiful and truthful to the rest of the series, not forced or out of place at all. The way history and fantasy is mixed is very impressive, very detailed without any dryness. The life of Eilan/Helena did feel a bit rushed sometimes, making it hard to shift to a different image of characters, who are suddenly middle-aged. 3 stars feels a bit scant, but 4 is too much compared to the other books in the series. Enjoyable read anyway.

fourlittlebees's review against another edition

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2.0

Marion Zimmer Bradley's The Mists of Avalon was such an incredible book that when I found Priestess of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley and Diana L. Paxson, I thought even if it was only half as good, it would be worth the read. Unfortunately, I overestimated it by about a factor of 100.

::: Before There Was Camelot... :::

While The Mists of Avalon takes place in medieval Britain, Priestess of Avalon is its ancestor, taking place in the time of the Roman Empire. Eilan is born to Rian, the Lady of Avalon, but Rian dies in childbirth. Rian's sister, Ganeda, succeeds Rian as Lady of Avalon, and banishes the child to go live with her father, as it is too painful to face her presence.

Eilan is later sent back to Avalon by her father to train as a priestess, but Ganeda cannot forget that Eilan's birth caused her mother's death, and Eilan constantly feels her aunt's dislike, chafing at every direction. When one of Ganeda's grand-daughters dies, Ganeda punishes Eilan by forbidding her from seeing her other grand-daughter. Eilan is left with even less reason to trust Ganeda, and when Ganeda plans to send Aelia, a shy priestess, and Eilan's best friend, to the Beltane fires to be with a Roman, Constantius, Eilan recognizes him from a vision she'd had, and switches places with Eilan, and Ganeda bans her from Avalon.

Eilan leaves with Constantius, and begins a new life she feels she has been destined for: bearing him a son who will change the Empire. In choosing this life and having Constantine, however, she realizes that her visions were incomplete. The changes that Constantine makes aren't choices that Eilan might have intended, and she has to make sacrifices to follow the path of destiny.

::: Pale Imitation :::

From what I could glean from the book jacket, this book was started before Marion Zimmer Bradley's death and then Paxson completed it on her own, which may account for some of its problems. Priestess of Avalon is a fictionalized view of what Roman Emperor Constatine's mother might have been like had she been trained on the mythical Isle of Avalon that Zimmer Bradley created, and the conceit is intriguing.

However, at less than half the lenght of The Mists of Avalon, Priestess of Avalon suffers mightily. Trying to cover over 60 years of Eilan's life including all the changes in Emperor, political intrigue, battles, and characters would have taken AT LEAST as long a novel as The Mists of Avalon. At the point at which you need to include a three-page long list of characters at the front of the novel to help your reader keep them straight? You are dealing with far too large a cast in far too short a novel.

Priestess of Avalon feels as if it is trying for the same overall feel of Mists, but never gets there. And the frequent allusions to the possibility that Joseph of Arimethea was a practitioner of the pagan "Mysteries" that are practiced on Avalon seemed forced, and lent even less time to figuring out who was who and doing what. And with no mention of events or people on Avalon after Eilan's departure, trying to pick that thread back up toward the end of the book makes the plot even more stilted.

Priestess of Avalon could have been a fascinating book; a look at the Isle before the events that are more familiar to fans of Arthurian legend. However, it's readily apparent that Paxon was nowhere near prepared to step into Zimmer Bradley's shoes to complete this novel, and instead, Priestess of Avalon feels like a generic product you'd pick up at a close-out. Which, come to think of it, I did, since it was on the clearance table at the bookstore.

This review previously published at Epinions: http://www.epinions.com/review/Priestess_of_Avalon_by_Marion_Bradley_Books/content_194389184132

kaboomcju's review against another edition

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emotional mysterious reflective slow-paced

4.0

luna_virgo's review against another edition

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1.0

It's a rare book that bores or irritates me so much that I don't want to finish it. This one managed it in 50 pages. It's sadly obvious that Marion Zimmer Bradley didn't write this one.