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Lion's Blood: A Novel of Slavery and Freedom in an Alterative America [Englisch] [Gebundene Ausgabe]

Steven Barnes
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Kurzbeschreibung

Februar 2002
In an alternate Africa-ruled American South, slave labor is used from Europe to colonize the Americas. The Islamic African aristocratic family of Wakil Abu Ali indulge in luxury at their glorious estate called Dar Kush while white slaves--slaves like the young Aidan O'Dere and his Druid Irish family--work the land.
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Produktinformation

  • Gebundene Ausgabe: 480 Seiten
  • Verlag: Mysterious Press (Februar 2002)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0446526681
  • ISBN-13: 978-0446526685
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 23,1 x 16 x 4,3 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 5.0 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (1 Kundenrezension)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 593.581 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)

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In the year 1863, a primitive village is raided, the men killed, and the women and children captured. The survivors find themselves chained in the dark, filthy hold of a ship crossing the ocean to the New World, where they are sold into slavery. The powerful master of a vast Southern plantation purchases the 11-year-old Irish lad Aidan O'Dere. Yes, you read that right--in this alternate America, the South was colonized by black Africans, and the North by Vikings, who sell abducted Celts and Franks to the Southerners. Through his brilliant inversion of our history, author Steven Barnes examines the complex evils of slavery in a new light with Lion's Blood, an intelligent and exciting novel of freedom and bondage, battle and intrigue, sex and love, set in an America threatened by total war as Aztecs, Zulus, Moors, and whites clash.

A Hugo Award and Cable Ace Award nominee, Steven Barnes has written 15 novels and 15 teleplays. --Cynthia Ward


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5.0 von 5 Sternen verkehrte Welt 22. Februar 2003
Von kyrrdis
Format:Taschenbuch
"Lion's blood" gehört zum Genre der "Alternative history". Wie hätte unsere Welt im 19. Jahrhundert ausgesehen, wenn der Islam, und nicht das Christentum eine weltbeherrschende Machtstellung errungen hätte?
Bei Barnes äußert sich das so, daß die Muslime, vor allem jene afrikanischen Ursprungs, die Herren der Welt sind, während die weißen Europäer das verachtete und als unterentwickelt betrachtete Sklavenvolk sind.
Der Schauplatz des Romans ist ein Landgut im amerikanischen Süden, wo wir die Geschichte aus der Sicht des weißen Sklaven Aidan und des schwarzen Adeligen Kai erleben, die einen Traum der Freundschaft träumen, bis sie durch die Realität brutal daraus erweckt werden.

Ein mutiges, lebendiges und sehr spannendes Buch. Auch hat Barnes nicht einfach die Vorzeichen geändert, und uns einen amerikanischen Süden geliefert, wo Mummy die Herrin und Scarlett die Sklavin ist, sondern eine neue vollkommen anders funktionierende Welt erschaffen. Und erstaunlicherweise klingt sie glaubhaft.
Erzählerisch ist das Buch nicht immer ganz unvorhersehbar und klischeefrei, aber das fällt kaum ins Gewicht.

Und wenn man sich als Leser voller Scham dabei ertappt, daß man sich über die Vorurteile der zivilisierten Schwarzen über die unzivilisierten Weißen ärgert, dann, denke ich, hat man durch dieses Buch wieder etwas gelernt. Und das kann man nicht wirklich über viele Unterhaltungsromane sagen.

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5.0 von 5 Sternen A Close Mirror 17. Dezember 2002
Von Arthur W. Jordin - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Lion's Blood is a satire of race relations in this country in the latter half of the 19th century. On one hand, it is an exercise in polemics and rhetoric, but on the other, it tells an engrossing story of two boys who have a complex master-slave relationship. In many ways, it resembles an inverted Roots.

In ancient times, many Greeks, including Socrates, were attracted to Egypt, especially after a wounded Alexander claimed the throne of the Pharaoh. Alexandrian Egypt, allied with Kush, established trade routes up the Nile and into southern Africa. When Rome became a commercial and military threat, Egypt and Kush allied with Carthage and defeated Rome, which sank in obscurity. When Islam arose, Bilal, a former Abyssinian slave, saved Muhammad's daughter, Fatima, from the Prophet's enemies, carried her to Abyssinia, and married her. Fatima become an impassioned leader, second only to the Prophet himself, leading her followers on the jihad that established Islam throughout Africa.

When a plague swept through the Egyptian royalty, an Abyssinian gained the throne, giving both empires a black royalty. The plague also swept Europe, killing the bulk of the population, and leaving only small villages and scattered barbarian tribes. In 1863, the Egyptian and Abyssinian empires are the two superpowers. Egypt has colonies in Bilalistan, corresponding to the Gulf states from Alabama to southeastern Texas, but most colonists are Abyssinian or Zulu. It's just a matter of time before the colonists declare their own independence.

Aiden is an Irish boy who, along with his mother and sister, has been captured by Norse raiders. They are sold in Andalus and shipped across the Atlantic to Bilalistan. Some die, the survivors are sick, and all feel they are in hell. In Bilalistan, Aiden and his mother are sold to Dar Kush, but his sister Nessa is not. When they reach Dar Kush, the estate of the Wakil Abu Ali Jallaleddin ibn Rashid al Kush, Aiden meets the second son, Kai, and aids him in a prank that gets him switched. Kai saves him from most of the punishment and selects him as his footboy. Despite their difference in status, the boys develop a strong friendship. However, situations keep happening that bring the friendship in conflict with the master-slave relation.

This story does not pull many punches in describing the effects of chattel slavery on both master and slave. However, it dwells on the worst aspects of that institution only in passing. Barnes points out the almost universal occurrence of slavery in ancient Europe and Asia. In fact, the Norse are only slightly more energetic in slave taking in this story than their historical counterparts; the Norse role in this book parallels the role of the Zulu and other warrior tribes in Africa. Barnes is particularly harsh in his portrayal of the major Zulu character, Shaka, whom Barnes probably modeled on the historical Shaka, but the other Zulus are only slightly less fierce.

Of course, Barnes had to make choices in creating his mirror image of our timeline. He choose Islam as the major religion, probably because we know more about it, but the chances of Muhammed becoming the Prophet of Allah would seem to be rather slim. After all, Muhammed drew from Christian as well as Judaic and Zoroastrian sources for his Holy Book. In this timeline, there would be no Constantine to sanction Christianity and to establish Constantinople, there would be no Byzantine Empire to influence the Arabs, hold down the Persians, and stop the tide of Islam into Eastern Europe, and thus Christianity would be a minor religion in the Near East.

The worship of Baal, however, would likely be even more pervasive with the growth of a Carthage unhampered by Rome. Slavery in Phoenicia and her colonies was much worse than that portrayed in Lion's Blood; it involved human sacrifice, among other horrors, and was more like that practiced by the Aztecs. The slavery in this book is more a matter of economics and greed like that of the latifundia of Rome and the plantations of the American South, large commercial farms which had few mechanized tools and thus needed large numbers of human laborers. Slavery was a opportunistic solution practiced in many places and times; for example, the Nazis practiced such slavery and rumors of slavers persist around Indonesia.

This is Barnes first effort at inventing a whole new world -- well, timeline -- and it is great. The scope is larger, although the cast is still kept comfortably small. The plot is predictable, but intentionally so. He succeeded in making me see slavery from the eyes of a master and a slave and I didn't like it either way. He has the best siege sequence since the Alamo, but with survivors to tell the story; his equivalent to the "cross the line" speech was a corker! At the end, the finale was a foregone conclusion, yet still an uplifting experience.

Barnes has been growing as a writer and this novel shows his versatility. While this book may bring wider fame, I hope he also keeps writing stories with less scope but more innovative plots. Recommended to all Barnes fans and anyone who has thought seriously of the effects of slavery on this country and it's peoples.

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5.0 von 5 Sternen A Very Important Book 16. Februar 2002
Von Rom Wills - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
My wife gave me a copy of "Lion's Blood" for my birthday. The premise of the book intrigued me as an African-American man. Reading the book itself was exciting because it had something for everyone. There was action, an alternate history, romance, spirituality, politics, and even my opinion social commentary. This book is most important in terms of how this nation looks at the history of slavery and the sheer absurdity of it all. I think one of the most memorable and thought provoking scenes in the book was when Aidan O'Dere and Sophia encountered the white slaves who were Muslims and had African names. These people had been disconnected from their heritage and had identified with their oppressors. It was powerful.

Lion's Blood does what good science fiction should do: It makes you think. Once someone starts to think, change can be brought about. My hat's off to Steven Barnes for creating such a compelling, well researched, action packed, socially relevant story. I look forward to the movie.

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5.0 von 5 Sternen Lush, Intelligent, and a damn good read! 19. Juli 2004
Von Ein Kunde - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
When I picked this book up for the first time and read the overlying concept - an alternative history of 19th century America where the racial aspects of slavery are reversed - I confess I thought it sounded gimmicky. Curious, however, I turned to the first page and started reading. I found the writing terrible; trying too hard, streams of unfamiliar celtic terms dumped out in a "look how hard I researched!" fashion, and an over-idyllic setting. Bleh. I put it back on the library shelf.

Oh, if only I had given it a few pages more! Fortunately, I heard enough recommendations over the next couple of years that I checked it out and gave it another try. The clearing-of-the-throat narrative voice smoothes out after a couple of chapters, and with the capture of Aiden and his family by the Northmen, I was hooked.

This is a brutal story, full of death and a message that all races have the human flaws that enable them to be cruel. But it is intelligent, too. Barnes's alternative history is not just a black-white switch, it is a layered, complicated and fascinating creation - one that lives and breathes on its own. I was especially impressed with the insights on the Islamic religion from a unique perspective. But there are also explorations into the cultures of the Aztecs, Zulus, Egyptians and the Greeks - and how they would have developed over the centuries if Rome and Europe had become a backwater.

And lastly - it's simply a good read. Perhaps a little melodramatic at times, but I ate it up. It was good entertainment. Give it a try; I think you'll be pleasantly surprised.

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