The Candlemass Road

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The Candlemass Road
Harvill Press (UK)
HarperCollins
(US)
Publication date
1993
Pages156

The Candlemass Road is a historical novel from

Border Reivers, a period Fraser had earlier written about in The Steel Bonnets and would later return to in The Reavers.[1][2]

Fraser later described it as "a rather dark morality tale - at least I meant it to have a moral - in what I hope was a reasonable imitation of Elizabethan English".[3]

The author said he had another purpose in writing the book, to emphasise the decline in law and order. "We're becoming a nation of broken men," he told a journalist. "Now that the law fails to protect us, people have just got to look out for themselves - within the custom of the country, which is not necessarily within the law."[4]

The book is mentioned in the film All My Friends Are Leaving Brisbane.

Reception

The Washington Post said "Readers who enjoy a snatch of history brought to life will enjoy this brief but fascinating tale. However, the slightness of the plot, along with the old-fashioned treatment of point of view and the lack of character development, will leave those looking for a satisfying story disappointed."[5]

References

  1. ^ Stanley Reynolds, "George MacDonald Fraser: He created Harry Flashman, tormentor of Tom Brown turned comical anti-hero", The Guardian, 4 January 2008 accessed 23 November 2012
  2. ^ Books: Reiving up on the Borders Cameron, David. The Daily Telegraph09 Oct 1993: 27.
  3. ^ George MacDonald Fraser, The Light's On at Signpost, HarperCollins 2002 p311
  4. ^ Lord, Graham (11 December 1993). "Writing on the border line". The Daily Telegraph. p. 69.
  5. ^ "FICTION: THE CANDLEMASS ROAD By George MacDonald Fraser Harvill/HarperCollins. 180 pp. $20". The Washington Post. 22 January 1995.

External links