The Crusader

The Crusader

by Michael Eisner (Author), Michael Eisner (Author)

Synopsis

Thrilling, grittily real historical novel set during one of the mo; Set during the late 13th century, when Christian Europe once again sought to prise the Holy Land and the jewel at its heart - Jerusalem - out of the grasp of the Infidel, 'The Crusader' tells the story of one of the last and bloodiest crusades as experienced by a young Spanish nobleman, Francisco Montcada. He is the hero of the novel, but his story is recounted by a former friend of his, a somewhat self-aggrandizing and ambitious Cistercian monk, Brother Lucas. Francisco has returned from the Levant a broken and seemingly possessed man. Now under the jurisdiction of the Inquisition, it falls to Brother Lucas to exorcise his tortured soul. Horrified and repelled by the condition in which he finds Francisco - in chains, emaciated, filthy, mad and utterly silent, the monk begins to coax the once-impassioned young man's story out of him. Through Lucas' increasingly questioning eyes and ears we learn of Francisco's story, of how he took up the Cross in order to redeem his beloved brother's memory and how, instead of the glory and redemption he so earnestly believed he would find at the gates of Jerusalem, he came face to face with the fear and the fury, the horror and the bloodshed of one of the most ignominious and brutal adventures ever undertaken in the name of Christendom...In the Year of Our Lord 1275...In the latter half of the thirteenth century Christian Europe once more sought to prise the Holy Land out of the grasp of the Infidel. Tens of thousands took up the Cross. Some for the greater glory of God, others for baser motives - driven by lust for power, for riches, for revenge. Here then is the story of the seventh and last Crusade, as experienced by a young Spanish nobleman, Francisco de Montcada. And while Francisco is the hero of this novel, his tale is told by his former friend and fellow acolyte, a venal and moderately trustworthy Cistercian monk named Brother Lucas. For Francisco has returned from the Levant a broken and seemingly possessed man. The Inquisition decree that his tortured soul be exorcized and the task falls to Brother Lucas. Eschewing the Inquisition's more usual methods, the monk sits with the silent, emaciated knight in his cell and talks to him. Slowly, tentatively, Francisco begins to tell his story: of how he set out to free the soul of his dead brother; of the fierce friendship with his cousin Andres, and his love for that great warrior's sister Isabel; of his fellow knights - his noble, battle-hardened commander Ramon, and the treacherous Don Fernando; of the heady triumph of the battle of Toron, and the courageous but ultimately doomed defence of the great crusader castle of Krak des Chevaliers. It is the story of how an honourable man found not the glory and redemption for which he'd yearned but instead unimaginable cruelty, barbarism and bloodshed. Set against a thrillingly recreated historical backdrop, this rousing, wonderfully crafted novel of religious fervour and human passions, of greed and betrayal, and love and war brings an extraordinary, tumultuous era brilliantly to life.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Edition: paperback / softback
Publisher: Doubleday
Published: 01 Jan 2002

ISBN 10: 0385602995
ISBN 13: 9780385602990
Book Overview: Thrilling, grittily real historical novel set during one of the most ignominious episodes in medieval history, the Crusades...

Media Reviews
A vivid historical novel set during the late 13th century with the seventh and final crusade to prise the Holy Land and Jerusalem out of the hand of the Infidel. This is the story of that bloody crusade as experienced by a young Spanish nobleman, Francisco de Montcada. The tale is told by a wily and ambitious Cistercian monk, Brother Lucas, a former friend. Francisco has returned from the Levant a total wreck, to be placed under the Inquisition in order to exorcise his soul, while Brother Lucas nurtures his body. Thus we learn Francisco's tale of how he took up the Cross in order to redeem his brother's memory. It is a tale of horror and bloodshed - a brutal enterprise perpetrated in the name of Christ. A strange and powerful story.
Author Bio
Michael Eisner is a graduate of Yale University and Yale Law School. He has worked in refugee camps on the Thai Cambodia border and was in Chile during the transition from Pinochet's rule to democracy. An expert in international law, he worked on the Middle East peace process for the U.S. State Department. It was during a trip to Syria, he visited the massive medieval fortress, Krak des Chevaliers, and it inspired him to write a novel about the Crusades. Michael Eisner live in New York City.