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Aztec | 
enlarge | Author: Gary Jennings Publisher: Forge Category: Book
List Price: £15.99 Buy New: £6.90 You Save: £9.09 (57%)
New (18) Used (4) from £6.90
Rating: 9 reviews Sales Rank: 81380
Media: Paperback Pages: 768 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.1 x 2.4
ISBN: 0765317508 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780765317506 ASIN: 0765317508
Publication Date: May 16, 2006 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews: Read 4 more reviews...
Best book I have read in a long time. November 15, 2008 Bubblez From the first few pages of this book I was hooked. I had imagined this book to be a general story about an Aztec, but was I mistaken. There is nothing general about this book. The story follows the path of an Aztec called Mixtli and boy does he have a story to tell. I never knew where the story was going to take me next. I found at times I wanted to turn away as it is a bit gruesome in some areas but then being excited about reading the next page to see what happened. The story throughout the whole book maintains it credability. When you are reading the book you can feel all the emotions, etc that Mixtli has. You are there with him, seeing what he seeing, feeling what he feels, etc. Throughout this whole book I could never imagine how it was going to end. I had never seen this ending coming. I was so surprised and shocked. I highly recommend this book. It is an experience that you will never forget. The way the author has written the book is amazing.
Go Native! August 7, 2008 Mordsith (Suffolk, England) I love this well-researched, touching and informative novel. If this didn't really happen, it should have! The characters are well-drawn and the narrative not too wordy. It's the opposite of Lord Of The Rings, in that descriptions of the landscape are brief but incisive. Read it and you WILL cry! It's my Husband's favourite book.
First in the Azteca Series November 28, 2007 J. Chippindale (England)
I first read this book when it was published in 1980 and was mesmerized by the story telling skills of the author Gary Jennings, who went on to write several other books in the series and also The Journeyer, a wonderful book about the travels of Marco Polo. Aztec was certainly the first fictional book I had read about the Aztecs and I absolutely loved it. It is the story of what must have been the greatest native civilisation that inhabited north America, in the area now known as Mexico. It is a story of epic proportions about Mixtil a young boy who rises above the lowly beginnings of his family and distinguishes himself, firstly as a scribe and later as a warrior. He earns himself a great deal of money as a merchant traveling to all corners of the Aztec lands. Lands that were extremely diverse, including mountains, jungles, deserts and the coastal lands. Mixtil, travelled them all. This large volume is full to the brim with excitement and adventure and gives an insight into what it must have been like to be part of the Aztec nation. The weapons they had, the games they played and the human sacrifices they made of their enemies. I read it avidly. The only down side to the book is the virtually unpronounceable words of the people and the places. But this is a small price to pay for such a wonderful read.
Aztec Genocide November 25, 2007 A. Gothorp This is a monumental novel in length. It takes some commitment as a reader to start this very detailed work that reportedly took Gary Jennings ten years to produce. The original publication was in 1980, just nineteen years before Jennings died at the age of 70. The book follows the rise and fall of Mixtli, an Aztec who saw the coming of the Spanish and the downfall of the Mexica. Starting the story as a lowly son of a quarry attendant, Mixtli rises to become a man of influence. There is quite a lot of humour in the novel as Mixtli tells his uninhibited tale of his sexual activities combined with his erudite observations of what life was like in the Aztec empire before the arrival of the Spanish. More horrific (and graphically described) are some of the religious ceremonies involving human sacrifice and Jennings explores how to an Aztec this was accepted and how to the Spanish this was repulsive. A view we would of course share, but Jennings does not miss the irony of this coming from the invading Spanish Christians considering it was they who triggered the genocide of the entire Aztec culture, and indeed they who happily devised novel ways of murdering Aztecs who broke their newly imposed rules. Here then are some good factual based stories that make it fairly easy to digest some ancient Central American history. The actions of Cortes, appear to me, to be pretty much as they are known in historical fact. The Spaniards are depicted along the same lines as described in the `Black Legend', i.e. `cruel', `intolerant' and `fanatical', so probably not the book for you if you are an ardent Spanish nationalist. If you're a fan of historical fiction, then you must read this. There is only one historical novel that I have read that is comparable in depth and scope and that is the brilliant This Thing of Darkness by the late Harry Thompson.
Intimate story played out against epic background December 7, 2006 Mr. Tristan Martin (Cambridge, UK) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Gary Jennings's Aztec concerns the life of one individual man, his rise from humble beginnings to a man of wealth and influence, in ancient meso-America. If this sounds like an animated Disney film, I should mention that there are copious amounts of blood, sex and violence in this book. I am generally not given to reading a lot of fiction but I was hugely impressed with this piece of work. Mr Jennings has created a truly memorable novel, filled with colourful characters and eventful set-pieces, a tapestry of romance, adventure, travel and history. It is hard to over-sell this particular book. After visiting some of the places mentioned in this book, including the Aztec pyramids and reading some of the relevant history, I have the greatest respect for what Gary Jennings has achieved. The story is rich and evocative, the life of a meso-American civilisation at its peak is vibrantly brought to life; the clothing, the food, the rituals and the architecture, the wars and the human sacrifice. The introduction of the Spanish conquistadors and their subsequent destruction of a rich culture is painfully authentic. As written above, I am not given to much fiction but this book was simply stunning. And no singing animals.
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