The Celtic Ring (Mariners Library Fiction Classic)

The Celtic Ring (Mariners Library Fiction Classic)

by Bjorn Larsson (Author)

Synopsis

On a dark night in the Danish harbour of Dragor, Ulf is handed a log book by a sailor who then disappears. The bizarre events recorded in the log book lead Ulf and his friend to make a dangerous winter crossing of the North Sea to Scotland and face arms smugglers and followers of a Druidic cult.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 402
Edition: Revised ed.
Publisher: Sheridan House
Published: 18 Jan 2001

ISBN 10: 157409114X
ISBN 13: 9781574091144

Media Reviews
In the 1990s, a sailor hands his logbook to a Swede named Ulf living on his sloop in Denmark, then disappears. Log entries hint of a Druid revival, with allusions to Scotland's Caledonian Canal and a grisly cult. Ulf wants answers and asks friend Torben, a Celt/IRA buff, to join him on a Scotland cruise to get them, but doesn't reveal his motive. Sound familiar? Translated from Swedish, this is a fine cruising yarn in which The Riddle of the Sands is a clue. Cruising World A Swedish yacht owner stumbles into a Celtic plot for worldwide self-sovereignty in The Celtic Ring, a craggy, atmospheric thriller by Swedish writer and sailor Bjorn Larsson. After a meeting with an excitable Scotsman, Ulf, a solitary middle-aged man living on board his yacht, the RUSTICA, embarks on an adventure that takes him on a wild winter sail across the North Sea. Though a bit sluggish in the water, Larsson's novel is thoroughly steeped in seafaring lore, and will be of particular interest to sailors and Celtic history buffs. Trans. from the Swedish by George Simpson. Publishers Weekly A dark thriller of modern day Druids, gruesome Celtic rituals, arms smuggling and nail-biting sailing in some of the most dangerous waters in the world. The story, which is concerned mainly with efforts to maintain independence for the Celtic followers of Brittany, Wales, Scotland and Ireland, takes us on a quest across the North Sea in a 31-ft yacht in the middle of the winter! The reader is kept avidly turning pages to discover what lies behind the attempts on the lives of the two intrepid Swedish sailors who have unwittingly found themselves involved in a series of bizarre events. The book has won critical acclaim in Europe and I can understand why. Apart from providing a riveting tale, I learned much about the ancient and enigmatic Celts and their strange beliefs, some of which endure to the present day. Sailing