Summary
Katherine Neville’s groundbreaking novel, The Eight, dazzled audiences more than twenty years ago and set the literary stage for the epic thriller. A quest for a mystical chess service that once belonged to Charlemagne, it spans two centuries and three continents, and intertwines historic and modern plots, archaeological treasure hunts, esoteric riddles, and puzzles encrypted with clues from the ancient past. Now the electrifying global adventure continues, in Neville’s long anticipated sequel: The Fire.
Cover of The Fire (Katherine Neville)
2003, Colorado: Alexandra Solarin is summoned home to her family’s ancestral Rocky Mountain hideaway for her mother’s birthday. Thirty years ago, her parents, Cat Velis and Alexander Solarin, believed that they had scattered the pieces of the Montglane Service around the world, burying with them the secrets of the power that comes with possessing it. But Alexandra arrives to find that her mother is missing and that a series of strategically placed clues, followed swiftly by the unexpected arrival of a mysterious assortment of houseguests, indicates that something sinister is afoot. There are eight people in all, of course. The Game is afoot once more.
When she inadvertently discovers from her aunt, the chess grandmaster Lily Rad, that the most powerful piece of Charlemagne’s service has suddenly resurfaced and the Game has begun again, Alexandra is swept into a journey that takes her from Colorado to the Russian wilderness and at last into the heart of her own hometown: Washington D.C.
1822, Albania: Thirty years after the French Revolution, when the chess service was unearthed, all of Europe hovers on the brink of the War of Greek Independence. Ali Pasha, the most powerful ruler in the Ottoman Empire, has angered the sultan and is about to be attacked by Turkish forces. Now he sends the only person he can rely upon–his young daughter, Haidee–on a dangerous mission to smuggle a valuable relic out of Albania, through the mountains and over the sea, to the hands of the one man who might be able to save it.
Haidee’s journey from Albania to Morocco to Rome to Greece, and into the very heart of the Game, will result in revelations about the powerful chess set and its history that will lead at last to the spot where the service was first created more than one thousand years before: Baghdad.
The quest for the set ranges from the harem of Ali Pasha in 19th-century Albania to present-day Baghdad and Washington, D.C., and involves such historic figures as Charlemagne, Isaac Newton, Lord Byron and Napoleon.
Personal Opinion
In structure and elements, the new novel has much in common with The Eight: one story set in the 1820s, another in the 1990s, with characters in each period playing a high-stakes game related to a chess set that once belonged to Charlemagne. Blending exquisite prose and captivating history with nonstop suspense, Neville again weaves an unforgettable story of danger, action, and intrigue.
Nevertheless, I liked much The Eight because I found The Fire a bit complex. It was sometimes difficult for me to find the connection between chapters and I found some chapters without interest or unnecessary.
Finally, next you have links of other interesting books I have read:
- The Hunger Games (Suzanne Collins)
- Playing the Enemy (John Carlin)
- The Alchemist (Pablo Coelho)
- The Physician (Noah Gordon)
- The Lord of the Rings (J.R.R. Tolkien)
- The Hobbit (J.R.R. Tolkien)
- The Cathedral of the Sea (Ildefonso Falcones)
- The Art of Loving (Erich Fromm)
- Ninja Crisis (Leopoldo Abadía)
- Annoyomics (Risto Mejide)
- The Shadow of the Wind (Carlos Ruiz Zafón)
- The Afghan (Frederick Forsyth)
- The Eight (Katherine Neville)
- The Da Vinci Code (Dan Brown)
- Angels and Demons (Dan Brown)
- Dante's Equation (Jane Jensen)
- Wecome to the Real World (Sandro Rosell)
- The Physician (Noah Gordon)
- The Pillars of the Earth (Ken Follett)
- Le Petit Prince (Antoine de Saint-Exupéry)
- El Quijote (Miguel de Cervantes)
- Victus (Albert Sánchez Piñol)
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