Tag Archives: JC Harvey

#BookReview ‘The Dead Men’ by JC Harvey @JCollissHarvey #historical

The Dead Men by JC Harvey is a rattling good tale set during the Thirty Years War. The best I’ve read for a long time. JC HarveySecond in the 17th century series about adventurer Jack Fiskardo that started with The Silver Wolf, in which we see the boy Jack become a man, the action in The Dead Men takes place between July 1630 to November 1631 when fighting was at its most brutal. There’s a useful Author Note at the beginning with a historical background to the period, which was gratefully received, as was the cast of characters. The scope of this series is huge and so needs large personalities to populate it. Jack Fiskardo is that man. Scarred, fierce, loyal, thoughtful and yes, a little intimidating, he is a fantastic hero. Yes, a romantic hero too. Harvey takes him and his band of ‘discoverers’, advance scouts in today’s military terms, across Eastern Europe to some of the most deadly fighting in the war. They stay alive, some of them, by their skills, their instincts, bravery and camaraderie. Many characters are familiar from The Silver Wolf – Zoltan, the Gemini, Ziggy, Kai as well as Mungo Sant and his ship the Guid Marie – plus new faces including Rafe Endicott, an English writer who sends reports back to London to be published in the coranto or newsletter ‘The Swedish Intelligencer.’ People at home are hungry for information about the war, the bloodshed, the victories, the murders and atrocities. And the heroes and legends.
Staying one step ahead of the front line, scrounging food, living wild in the woods from Northern Germany to Bohemia, the band of spies are on the trail of Jack’s sworn enemy Carlo Fantom. On the way, they meet friends and enemies, lovers and liars and even a pack of English actors, the Pilgrim Players who are rehearsing a much-redacted version of Romeo and Juliet. Jack and his discoverers are present at the scenes of some of the worst fighting of this period, including the destruction of Magdeburg in 1631. Along the way, Fiskardo kills many men and makes many loyal friends.
Harvey has a light hand at putting her mostly fictional characters into the historical war setting. Many of the myths really existed, including Carlo Fantom, and a horde of gold really did disappear in the middle of war.
The cast of characters is long but each is a rounded personality, a real person, from pig boy Pyotri in the Giant Mountains, on the border between Bohemia and Poland, to Victor Lopov, the timid former archivist of the Prince-Bishop of Prague.
A real joy to read.
As with the first book I found it paid to stop trying to remember all the characters and towns and allow myself to be carried along on the emotion of Jack Fiskardo’s quest. I’m now awaiting the next installment.

Here’s my review of THE SILVER WOLF, first in the Jack Fiskardo series.

If you like this, try:-
The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock’ by Imogen Hermes Gowar
The Surfacing’ by Cormac James
‘The City of Tears’ by Kate Mosse #2JOUBERT

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE DEAD MEN by JC Harvey @JCollissHarvey https://wp.me/p2ZHJe-6FS via @SandraDanby

COMING SOON… THE NEXT BOOK I REVIEW WILL BE:- Suzanne Collins

#BookReview ‘The Silver Wolf’ by JC Harvey @JCollissHarvey #historical

The Silver Wolf by JC Harvey is first in the Fiskardo’s War series set in 17th century Europe during the Thirty Years War. If, like me, your history is a little hazy, the author’s note at the beginning is helpful. This was a time of sprawling wars and disputes, religious, political and national plus local personal grudges being settled. Into this soup of battle, Harvey has inserted the story of Jack Fiskardo. And what a story this is. JC HarveyYoung Jack is an orphan, surviving on his wits in the Amsterdam docklands. Around his neck he wears a silver token of a wolf. He knows neither its provenance nor its meaning. People who meet him and recognise it, look at him askance. Jack is a brilliant hero. Feisty, brave yet considered, he has a fondness for the bullied and those weaker than himself. And he is also something of a horse whisperer.
This is a long book – 560 pages, though not as long as Ken Follett’s The Pillars of the Earth – and slowly we pick up hints about the relevance of Jack’s wolf necklace. There is a huge cast of characters, but a limited number in each place that Jack tarries awhile. All of the time, he is on the move, looking for answers to the mysterious deaths of his parents, seeking the murderer. He slips quietly into each new community, clearly different, attracting curious glances but earning respect and affection. And all the time, war is raging somewhere in Europe. Troops are on the move, battles are won and lost, soldiers must be fed and watered, billets found. Around the troop movements, a village of suppliers grows; food, alcohol, whores, horses, munitions. Jack slips in and out of groups, sometimes changing his name.
Once I stopped worrying about the true historical context and relaxed into Jack’s story, the pages turned easily despite the occasional lull in pace. There are occasional flashbacks to Jack’s childhood in the seaside village of Belle-Dame, near Rochelle in France. Some names are similar and therefore confusing – I constantly got Bronheim and Bertholt confused – others have names and nicknames.
Excellent. Such an ambitious novel for a debut. The research and world-building is extensive, but the real star is Jack. The series can only get better.

Here’s my review of THE DEAD MEN, second in the Jack Fiskardo series.

If you like this, try:-
The Burning Chambers’ by Kate Mosse #1JOUBERT
The Evening and the Morning’ by Ken Follett #PREQUELKINGSBRIDGE
Winter Pilgrims’ by Toby Clements #1KINGMAKER

And if you’d like to tweet a link to THIS post, here’s my suggested tweet:
#BookReview THE SILVER WOLF by JC Harvey @JCollissHarvey https://wp.me/p5gEM4-5Lo via @SandraDanby