Monday, April 25, 2011

Teaser Tuesday - Fall of Giants by Ken Follett


Book one of Ken Follett's Century Trilogy begins on June 22, 1911, coronation day for King George V at Westminster Abbey in London. To the northwest of London in the mining town of Aberowen, South Wales, 13 year old Billy Williams went down in the pit for the first time. On nearby Ty Gwyn (Welsh for White House) estate, Earl Fitzherbert and his family live in wealth and priviledge by licensing the mineral rights to rich coal seams beneath the Fitzherbert farm lands. Fall of Giants is the story of five families--American, German, Russian, English and Welsh-- intertwined and conflicted by class, ideology, nationality,and world views in the leadup to World War I and its initial conflicts. ("Barmouth Evening" by Welsh artist Christopher David Williams, 1873-1934)

Teaser Tuesday is described by its host Miz B over at Should Be Reading as a "weekly bookish meme" open to any reader who wants to play along. If, like me, you're always curious about what people are reading or on the lookout for the next great read, then this may by your meme. To play, just click on Miz B's link above for the simple rules.


Fall of Giants
by Ken Follett

December 24, 1914, battle trenches near Ypres on France and Belgium border, Welsh Major Earl Fitzherbert:


"He spotted two sergeants, one British and one German, deep in conversation. He tapped the Brit on the shoulder. 'You!' he said. 'What the devil are you doing?'

The man answered in the flat guttural accent of the Cardiff docks. 'I don't know how it happened,sir, exactly. Some of the Jerries got up on their parapet, unarmed, and shouted, ''Happy Christmas,' then one of our boys done the same, then they started walking towards one another and before you could say chips everyone was doing it.' " p. 384

Book Description: As with this description of the WW I Christmas Truce of 1914, Follett tells the stories of five very different families as they live through the drama and separations of the First World War and the corresponding fight for worker rights and women's suffrage. Follett commented in an interview that his approach to historical fiction was to not take liberties with historical facts for the sake of advancing the story. In actuality, he had eight historical scholars of the period fact check his writing before publication. This attention to detail adds great richness and believeability to the stories of individual characters.

When I came to this Christmas Truce account in Fall of Giants, I was delighted. It reminded me of the 2005 Academy Award-nominated film Joyeux Noel which tells the powerful story of other soldiers who spontaneously decided to lay down their arms--for just one night--and walk out to meet each other in No Man's Land between the trenches and wish each other a "Merry Christmas." Here's the trailer:



Another example of how literature, art, music, and drama ties all the great stories together and helps us make sense of it all.

7 comments:

  1. Excellent book and teaser selection. My TT: http://www.rundpinne.com/2011/04/teaser-tuesdays-the-pun-also-rises.html

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  2. Nice teaser. That must have been amazing when it happened. Thanks for visiting my teaser.

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  3. I have heard of this happening during war at Christmas. There was a cease fire for the duration of Christmas Day. I can't remember which war or where though.

    Here's my Teaser Tuesdays.

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  4. Read only one of Follett's. Nice teaser. Mine is from a new culinary mystery.
    Crunch Time

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  5. Good teaser! I still have Pillars of the Earth sitting on my TBR shelf! Thanks for stopping by today :)

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  6. I haven't read any of Ken Follett -- I guess I'm waiting for the time and mood to strike me. Is this a chunkster, too?

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  7. I'm going to order Fall of Giants right now. Thanks for telling us about it.

    I love that film, as you know, and must watch it again soon.

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