Member Reviews
I appreciate the publisher allowing me to read this book. I found this a fascinating read that I had trouble putting down, I can't wait to read more from this author
I received a free digital copy of “ The Quarant” by Graham Bullen via Net Galley in return for an honest review.
“The Quarant” is a historical drama set in 14 th century medieval Venice, a city at the height of its commercial and naval power. Sailing into the harbor is a trading ship carrying an English merchant trader, Malian. He sees the port of Venice which has been laid waste by a recent earthquake and tsunami, with the quays and wharves shattered, and parts of the city still smoking from fires. The ship and its cargo of wheat and trade goods is put into the required forty day Quarant for inspection, assaying and weighing to make sure the cargo is as shown on the shipping documents.
Those forty days are exactly what Milan and his co- conspirators have planned to use in their plot to overthrow the Council and the Doge to take control of Venice. The author of the conspiracy is Edward III of England, who seeks to break the domination of Venice. All conspiracies depend on secrecy and trust, or mistrust, of everyone. The Council has caught wind of the plot and their agents are assiduous and vicious in ferreting out secrets. Malian knows that to fail is to die, slowly and horribly. As the forty day clock down, tension and danger grows.
From this beginning of the novel, it is obvious that the author has studied the time period and knows Venetian history, customs and people of the Medieval period. Descriptions of the street life, power structure, buildings - everything - are quite detailed. He often uses the Italian word to description something. A short glossary for definition and historical personages is provided in the end papers. However, I found it an inconvenience on a digital device to go there and back ( at least for me.) I much prefer the more common usage of providing a parenthetical definition/ description next to the foreign wording.
I thought that the longish expositions and descriptions slowed the story. In historical dramas, one desires a taste not the entire feast. There is also a cast of characters at the endpapers, and it is needed because there are numerous characters in the book. The characters, their alliances, the plot and the counter plots make for a tangled read. I often read historical novels, dramas and mysteries, everything from C.J. Sansom through Rory Clemens and Phillipa Gregory to John Jake’s, so I am familiar with the genre. I looked forward to reading “ The Quarant”, but I was disappointed. I had hope for a good book about a time and place not often illuminated in popular fiction, but this was a book I found easy to set aside.
Summing: I give it three stars for the basic all that went into it, but a bit of judicious editing would have made for a better reading experience.
With everything that has happened in 2020, you might think it was the worst year ever. But it has been nothing compared to 1348 in Europe, and specifically for the city of Venice. That year began with a 6.9 magnitude earthquake across most of Italy. It triggered a Tsunami in the Adriatic that drained the Venice Lagoon before the massive wave crashed into the city, multiplying the earthquake's destruction and washing many citizens out to sea. Within days, the worst pandemic of all time arrived; after a few months, about a third of Venice's population had died of the Bubonic Plague.
In The Quarant, Graham Bullen has woven a fascinating tale of international intrigue into a background of divine destruction. Malin Le Cordier is a British maritime trader with a thriving business in Venice, recruited by the English Crown to help overthrow the Venetian government. Throughout his life, Malin's good character has earned him the trust and love of a circle of capable friends, and he has engaged some of them in the scheme. As the day chosen for their ultimate action approaches, they face increasing peril. A key co-conspirator disappears, and there is a risk he might expose them all under torture. Malin himself fends off an attempted assassination, yet the power behind these attacks remains in the shadows; it may not be the Doge and his Councils but an agent of revenge from Malin's past.
There are few rules in this game, and one never knows who they can trust. Businesses, reputations, and lives are at risk, with no guarantee of a happy ending. To survive, Malin needs help from his friends to reveal and unravel the threads of greed and hostility that tie their fates together. And even that might not be enough to avoid death in all its forms.
Bullen has done a masterful job of making the past feel real, and his descriptions of 14th Century Venice are immersive. For anyone who has had the opportunity to explore this timeless city, the calles and canals will seem so familiar that you'll easily picture yourself there.
Malin's backstory is told through flashbacks to his childhood in England, his escape to Antwerp and apprenticeship, maturation, then eventual recruitment into King Edward III's plot. We meet a rich tapestry of characters, events, and locales that would provide ample material for several engaging prequels.
The Quarant is an absorbing story of intrigue, a first-class spy novel with a wonderfully flawed hero and a solid storyline. The plot it describes is fictional yet plausible when placed within historical events. I loved it!
Highly enjoyable!
Venice in the 14th Century. We follow the merchant Malin Le Cordier as he and his associates play a deadly political game with La Serenissima - the price of failure being exceedingly high, the chance of betrayal overwhelming. The story evolves over a period of forty days - the Quarant - or the period of time a merchant vessel arriving in Venice will spend in quarantine. We accompany the main characters through the highs and lows of their conspiracy, which culminates in the final, thrilling betrayal.
Bullen's attention to detail in describing both the physical and political landscape is superb, and we experience the sense of urgency as the characters do as we are propelled towards zero hour.
Have just finished this book, provided by the Publishers as an advance copy in exchange for a fair and honest review.
Mr. Bullen, don't take this personally; it is me, not you. I did not enjoy this very much. I love Italy, Venice in particular, and do like historical intrigue but the language was too florid for me. The style, to me, was more reminiscent of historical romance than politic intrigue.
I also found myself lost in characters. It took a long time to work out who was working for whom and by then I didn't care. Who was Malin? Why was his father considered so important? What was the plot and who was plotting for whom? While delaying the information furthers the story, too much felt delayed for too long and thus it felt like a technique rather than story flow.
I would so love to read this story again after another edit. As I said at the start, this is probably more me than the book and I urge you to give it a try if you do like historical fiction because you may like it for all the reasons I didn't.
I read this ARC in exchange for an honest review
All thoughts and opinions are mine
I love all thing Italian and historical fiction is very much my genre
I loved this
The style of writing drew me in very quickly. I found the book an atmospheric, vivid read