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| Patrick | 
enlarge | List Price: $7.99 Buy New: $6.39 You Save: $1.60 (20%)
Avg. Customer Rating:   (based on 42 reviews) Sales Rank: 37631 Category: EBooks
Author: Stephen R., Lawhead Publisher: HarperCollins e-books Studio: HarperCollins e-books Manufacturer: HarperCollins e-books Label: HarperCollins e-books Format: Kindle Book Language: English (Published) Media: Kindle Edition Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 592
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 ASIN: B000FCKOG8
Publication Date: February 7, 2006 Release Date: February 7, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description
Slave, soldier, lover, hero, saint, -- his life mirrored the cataclysmic world into which he was born. His memory will outlast the ages. Born of a noble Welsh family, he is violently torn from his home by Irish raiders at age sixteen and sold as a slave to a brutal wilderness king. Rescued by the king's druids from almost certain death, he learns the arts of healing and song, and the mystical ways of a secretive order whose teachings tantalize with hints at a deeper wisdom. Yet young Succat Morgannwg cannot rest until he sheds the strangling yoke of slavery and returns to his homeland across the sea. He pursues his dream of freedom through horrific war and shattering tragedy -- through great love and greater loss -- from a dying, decimated Wales to the bloody battlefields of Gaul to the fading majesty of Rome. And in the twilight of a once-supreme empire, he is transformed yet again by divine hand and a passionate vision of "truth against the world," accepting the name that will one day become legend?Patricius!
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| Customer Reviews: Read 37 more reviews...
  From J. Kaye's Book Blog December 22, 2008 When Succat's town is under attack, he is captured and sent to Ireland. He's mistaken for a commoner. Instead of being instead of being ransomed as would happen if they knew he was a noble, he's sent to be a slave.
When the master shepherd dies, Succat becomes a druid and soon falls in love. Later he makes it back to his home, just to find it in ruins.
This is an adventurous story about true love, loss, and finding your way back again.
  i like it August 22, 2008 pretty good adventure story. kinda gets weird towards the end but satisfying ending. i am not literature proffessor or anything just a guy who likes good stories.
  Another Good Lawhead Book June 12, 2008 I've read the Celtic Crusades and Byzantium, so I feel I'm fairly acquainted with Lawhead's style. This book is a prime example of his works and was a good read for several reasons. First of all, Lawhead's pace is second to none. He doesn't dwell on tedious image dumps or have lengthy, hard-to-follow dialogue. Also, the way the book is organized is well thought-out, with the four names of Patrick serving as sections of the book. Lawhead is one of the better authors when it comes to using tactile images, such as the blistering cold or horrendous beatings the main character endures.
My only gripe is that the book wasn't longer and didn't explore the later life of Patrick as much as I would have liked. Perhaps the author didn't feel it important, but I believe this addition would have been welcome.
  Good Fiction, Terrible Biography May 5, 2008 Simply as a fictional novel, this work by Lawhead is an excellent read. BUT as a biography, it's a false account of Patrick's life.
Read St. Patrick of Ireland: A Biography by Phillip Freeman, which has good translations of St. Patrick's surviving letters. Read Patrick's known, fascinating writings and compare them to Stephen Lawhead's Patrick: Son of Ireland. Lawhead hugely diverges from many of the known facts of Patrick's life.
  Too Promiscuous January 17, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
My husband started me reading Lawhead and up until Patrick, I enjoyed his writing. We are very careful on the content of what we read and Lawhead had, thus far, been very morally clean. However, within the first 50 pages he includes lewd details of sexual relationships. I do not know anything about the historical Patrick, but this information was not necessary at all. If it had stopped I might not be writing this review, but the sexual promiscuity continues throughout the book in detail. While I very much enjoyed Hood and Scarlet as well as the Pendragon Cycle, I have nothing good to say about Patrick. Even the theology is loose and liberal. It made me wonder if Lawhead has changed what he believes. In the end, Patrick was a disappointment.
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