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Book Reviews of The Black Rood (Celtic Crusades, Bk 2)

The Black Rood (Celtic Crusades, Bk 2)
The Black Rood - Celtic Crusades, Bk 2
Author: Stephen R. Lawhead
ISBN-13: 9780061051104
ISBN-10: 0061051101
Publication Date: 2000
Pages: 624
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 42

3.9 stars, based on 42 ratings
Publisher: Eos
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

4 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed The Black Rood (Celtic Crusades, Bk 2) on + 18 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
The characters are likeable, but the plot is rather drawn out.
reviewed The Black Rood (Celtic Crusades, Bk 2) on + 593 more book reviews
Excellent read, very well done.
gecko avatar reviewed The Black Rood (Celtic Crusades, Bk 2) on + 2 more book reviews
I enjoyed reading this book so much that I have requested the 'The Mystic Rose' on my wish list. I'm adding Stephen Lawhead as a new favorite author. If you like to read about the great crusade then you will enjoy this book along with the 'The Iron Lance'.
CraftyTJ avatar reviewed The Black Rood (Celtic Crusades, Bk 2) on + 381 more book reviews
The Celtic Crusades is a trilogy of stories about a noble Scottish family whose successive generations venture to the Holy Land at the time of the Crusades to retrieve sacred relics. In the first book, The Iron Lance, Murdo Ranulfson went to Jerusalem and brought back the iron lance used at the crucifixion. Now Duncan, Murdo's son, must find and preserve the Black Rood--a piece of the true cross. As in The Iron Lance, the main narrative is framed by the memoirs of Gordon Murray, nineteenth century scion of the ancient Scottish clan and member of a Christian secret society whose mission is to bring the world back to the true path.
This middle volume follows a format familiar to fantasy readers: an unformed youth leaves home to find himself and fulfill his destiny. In his travels through distant and dangerous lands, our hero rescues and is rescued by a series of quirky characters who join his quest, encountering divine visions, politics in the court of the Caliph, and cult assassins. He returns from his adventures older and wiser, triumphantly clutching the Black Rood, and accompanied, as an added bonus, by a new and beautiful wife.

Lawhead sprinkles his tale with delicious hints about revelations regarding the potential offspring of Jesus, which, if expanded upon in the final volume, threaten to elevate this fiction from competent to genuinely intriguing.