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Showing Item 8 of 38
Preferred library: South Central Regional Library?

Fall of giants Cover Image E-audiobook E-audiobook

Fall of giants

Follett, Ken. (Author). Lee, John Rafter. (Narrator). OverDrive, Inc. (Added Author).

Summary: Follows the fates of five interrelated families-- American, German, Russian, English, and Welsh-- as they move through the dramas of the First World War, the Russian Revolution, and the struggle for women's suffrage. Thirteen-year-old Billy Williams enters a man's world in the Welsh mining pits. Gus Dewar finds a surprising new career in Woodrow Wilson's White House. Brothers Grigori and Lev Peshkov embark on radically different paths when their plan to immigrate to America falls afoul. Billy's sister Ethel, a housekeeper for the aristocratic Fitzherberts, takes a fateful step above her station, while Lady Fitzherbert falls in love with Walter von Ulrich, a spy at the German embassy in London.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780307737397 (sound recording : OverDrive Audio Book)
  • ISBN: 030773739X (sound recording : OverDrive Audio Book)
  • Physical Description: electronic resource
    remote
  • Publisher: [Westminster, Md.] : Books on Tape, 2010.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Downloadable audio file.
Title from: Title details screen.
Unabridged.
Duration: 30:37:58.
Participant or Performer Note: Read by John Lee.
System Details Note:
Requires OverDrive Media Console (file size: 440204 KB).
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Subject: Coal mines and mining -- Wales -- History -- Fiction
World War, 1914-1918 -- Fiction
Twentieth century -- Fiction
Great Britain -- History -- George V, 1910-1936 -- Fiction
Great Britain -- Social life and customs -- 1918-1945 -- Fiction
United States -- History -- 1913-1921 -- Fiction
Soviet Union -- History -- Revolution, 1917-1921 -- Fiction
Germany -- History -- 1918-1933 -- Fiction
Genre: Historical fiction.
Epic fiction.
Domestic fiction.
Audiobooks.

Electronic resources


  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2010 July #1
    After a sequence of spy thrillers, Follett burst onto the historical fiction scene in 1989 with the megahit The Pillars of the Earth, set in twelfth-century England, and nearly two decades later (having written many other novels in the meantime), he followed with a sequel, World without End. His new book inaugurates what is to be a trio of historical novels (called the Century Trilogy), and it duplicates in structure the two novels mentioned above: showcasing the lives of five families from all walks of life and involved in various ways with the issues of the day from the outbreak of WWI to the early 1920s and reflecting these issues over a broad geographical range, the families here being from Britain, the U.S., Russia, and Germany. The social range of this big, sweeping, completely enveloping novel is announced in the very first line: "On the day King George V was crowned at Westminster Abbey in London, Billy Williams went down the pit in Aberowen, Wales." Actual historical figures populate the narrative along with fictional characters, all of whom experience in different ways war, revolution, and the fight for women's rights. Copyright 2010 Booklist Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2010 July #2

    A massive, cat-squashing, multigenerational and multifamilial saga, the first volume of what Follett (World Without End, 2007, etc.) promises as a trilogy devoted to the awful 20th century.

    The giants in question, metaphorically, are the great and noble families of old Europe, a generally useless lot with a few notable exceptions. One such worthy, Lord Fitzherbert (try not to think of Bridget Jones here), is a sun around which lesser planets circle, a decent fellow who had been an admiral, British ambassador to the tsar's court at St. Petersburg, and a government minister. His son, Earl Fitzherbert, is less notable, if fabulously wealthy: He "had done nothing to earn his huge income," and the presence of the awful Liberals in Parliament, Winston Churchill among them, keeps him from coming into his own as the great foreign secretary he wishes he could be. Into the Fitzherbertian orbit fall the Williamses, Welsh colliers of sweet voice and radical disposition; if Follett's sprawling story has a center, it is in Billy, who is but 13 as the saga opens and has a great deal of growing up to do. In the outlying reaches of the galaxy is Grigori Peshkov, plotter of the Bolshevik victory and slayer of tsarist officers in a scene straight out of Doctor Zhivago, a confidant of Trotsky's, who figures in the later pages ("Trotsky took the bad news calmly. Lenin would have thrown a fit"). He's just one of history's greats to bow into Follett's pages: Churchill figures into the story, as does Woodrow Wilson. But so, too, does a full six-page dramatis personae, so that there's never a dull or unpeopled moment. Throughout it all, Follett keeps a dependable narrative chugging along; if the writing is never exalted, it is never less than workmanlike, though one wonders about anachronisms here and there. (Did Woodrow Wilson, college president and master diplomat, really say "Heck"?)

    With an announced million-copy initial printing and a national author tour, this is sure to be one of the season's inevitable and unavoidable blockbusters—and not undeservedly.

    Copyright Kirkus 2010 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ BookSmack
    Quality fiction is important. You don't want a story insulting your intelligence or wasting your time, though Paul Carson managed both with Ambush (St. Martin's, 2008). Be it his medieval saga The Pillars of the Earth (41 freaking hours on audio!) or taut thrillers like Code to Zero, my pick of the day for top-shelf stuff is fat Welshman Follett. The new thing he's doing is a 20th-century historical novel. But, wait, before he goes all Leon Uris on your ass (get it? Uris? Your Ass? Plus the whole historical novel thing? HA!), know that Follett keeps things peppy through what could be a torture-chamber-length book. Covering 1911 to the early 1920s, the story ranges all over Europe, Asia, and America following five families before during and after the Great War and the Russian Revolution. Central characters come to typify the societal upheaval du jour, such as Ethel, sister of a Welsh coal miner, who becomes a suffragette after squeezin' out a bastard. Follett is painting on a big canvas, so like George Lucas's Star Wars crap, some situations feel forced, and some characters feel like toy soldiers. Readers might have the sense they are reading the same text over again. But you're not reading an assburner like this for fine character detail, are you? It's entertaining, high-quality stuff on the whole. Keep in mind another not-crap writer who occasionally has stuff explode: James Lee Burke. And a woman who frequently has the crap explode right out of her: Delta Burke (no relation). - Douglas Lord, "Books for Dudes," Booksmack! 1/6/11 (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2010 April #1
    Forget The Eye of the Needle; Follett's biggest sellers are the medieval sagas The Pillars of the Earth and World Without End, which was published in 2007. Here, Follett stays historical but moves up to the early 1900s, telling the interwoven stories of five different families-American, German, Russian, English, and Welsh-all disrupted by World War I. With a one-day laydown worldwide on September 28; buy stacks. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2010 July #1
    Moving from the medieval world of the best-selling The Pillars of the Earth and World Without End, Follett's new historical novel is the first volume of a projected trilogy that follows five families-Welsh, English, German, Russian, and American-through the turbulent 20th century. Covering the period 1911-23, the narrative moves from family to family, country to country, as the Great War impends, happens, and closes. In the first pages, a Welsh boy enters the coal mines; he has just turned 13 that day. He can expect a short and dirty life, but it doesn't turn out that way. The book closes in confrontation: the ninth-richest man in Britain, Earl Fitzherbert, is forced by his own sense of manners to shake the hand of a bastard son he has never acknowledged. Fitz seduced the boy's mother when she was his housemaid. Now she's a Labour MP in the postwar coalition government. Fitz is the past. She's the future. The Great War has changed everything, even for the winners. Verdict Though lengthy, Fall of Giants never seems too long or confusing. Great fun, this is sure to be one of the best sellers of the fall season. The global broadcast of a TV miniseries based on The Pillars of the Earth starring Ian McShane and Donald Sutherland is sure to garner even more attention. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 4/1/10.]-David Keymer, Modesto, CA Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2010 July #2

    This first in a century-spanning trilogy from bestseller Follett (Eye of the Needle) makes effective and economical use of its lead characters, despite its scope and bulk. From a huge cast, eight figures emerge to play multiple roles that illustrate and often illuminate the major events, trends, and issues of the years leading up to and immediately beyond WWI: American diplomat Gus Dewar; Earl Fitzherbert, a wealthy Englishman; Fitz's sister, Lady Maud; German military attaché Walter von Ulrich; Russian brothers Grigori and Lev Peshkov; Welsh collier Billy Williams and his sister, Ethel, whom Fitz hires as a housemaid. Ingenious plotting allows Follett to explore such salient developments of the era as coal mine safety in Wales, women's suffrage, the diplomatic blundering that led to war, the horrors of trench warfare, and the triumph of the Bolsheviks. While this tome doesn't achieve the emotional depth of the best historicals, it is a remarkable and wonderfully readable synthesis of fact and fiction. 1,000,000 first printing; author tour. (Sept.)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2010 December #3

    Using characters from different countries—Russia, Wales, England, the U.S., and Germany—and from different classes, Follett's first book in the Century trilogy provides a compelling mesh of interactions that push the story forward and allow a panoramic view of WWI's burden on five families. With over 30 hours, this audiobook would be a challenge for any narrator, but John Lee proves a solid and engaging choice. His deep voice moves through the prose smoothly and forcefully; he manipulates his tone, emphasis, and accent to develop vocal personas for the extensive cast of characters, and keeps a solid pace through the dialogue. It's a marathon performance of a mammoth book that will leave listeners eagerly anticipating the next installment. A Dutton hardcover. (Sept.)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2010 PWxyz LLC
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