Angelot: Historical Novel
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Beschrijving
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Angelot is a finely wrought historical romance set in France under Napoleon's First Empire, where private feeling is inseparable from political allegiance. Through its young hero's loves, loyalties, and moral awakenings, the novel explores the pressures placed upon family, class, and conscience in a society disciplined by war and imperial authority. Price's prose is lucid, graceful, and atmospheric, combining the manners of the domestic novel with the broader sweep of nineteenth-century historical fiction. Eleanor C. Price was an English novelist with a marked interest in French history, aristocratic memory, and the intimate consequences of public upheaval. Her fiction often reveals a careful antiquarian imagination: she is less concerned with spectacle than with the texture of ordinary lives lived under extraordinary regimes. Angelot reflects this gift, suggesting an author attentive to inherited codes of honour, religious feeling, and the emotional cost of political transformation. Readers drawn to historically grounded fiction will find Angelot both engaging and thoughtful. It is especially recommended to those who admire novels in which romance, social observation, and political history are delicately interwoven. Price offers not merely a tale of youthful passion, but a humane meditation on duty, freedom, and the claims of the heart.
Angelot is a finely wrought historical romance set in France under Napoleon's First Empire, where private feeling is inseparable from political allegiance. Through its young hero's loves, loyalties, and moral awakenings, the novel explores the pressures placed upon family, class, and conscience in a society disciplined by war and imperial authority. Price's prose is lucid, graceful, and atmospheric, combining the manners of the domestic novel with the broader sweep of nineteenth-century historical fiction. Eleanor C. Price was an English novelist with a marked interest in French history, aristocratic memory, and the intimate consequences of public upheaval. Her fiction often reveals a careful antiquarian imagination: she is less concerned with spectacle than with the texture of ordinary lives lived under extraordinary regimes. Angelot reflects this gift, suggesting an author attentive to inherited codes of honour, religious feeling, and the emotional cost of political transformation. Readers drawn to historically grounded fiction will find Angelot both engaging and thoughtful. It is especially recommended to those who admire novels in which romance, social observation, and political history are delicately interwoven. Price offers not merely a tale of youthful passion, but a humane meditation on duty, freedom, and the claims of the heart.
AmazonPagina's: 172, Paperback, Sharp Ink