Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
WITH FIRE & SWORD Trilogy - Historical Novels: With Fire and Sword The Deluge & Pan Michael - cover

WITH FIRE & SWORD Trilogy - Historical Novels: With Fire and Sword The Deluge & Pan Michael

Henryk Sienkiewicz

Translator Jeremiah Curtin

Publisher: DigiCat

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

Henryk Sienkiewicz's "With Fire & Sword" Trilogy masterfully intertwines historical fiction with epic narrative, vividly depicting the tumultuous period of the 17th-century Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth during the Khmelnytsky Uprising. Sienkiewicz employs a rich, descriptive prose style, immersing readers in the vibrant yet brutal world of noble warriors, existential struggles, and cultural conflict. His portrayal of historical events is laced with deep philosophical undercurrents, offering a commentary not only on the nature of war and valor but also on love and vengeance, capturing the zeitgeist of a formative era in Central European history. Sienkiewicz himself was deeply influenced by his Polish heritage and concern for national identity, which inspired him to illuminate a period often overshadowed by more prominent European stories. As a laureate of the Nobel Prize in Literature, his experiences of loss and cultural revival provided fertile ground for his storytelling, allowing him to weave personal narratives into historical tapestry with unparalleled depth and insight. This trilogy is essential for readers interested in engaging with Poland's rich historical narrative through a literary lens. Sienkiewicz's emotional and detailed storytelling will resonate with anyone seeking adventure, romantic intrigue, and a profound reflection on the human condition amidst chaos. A must-read for fans of historical fiction!
Available since: 12/16/2023.
Print length: 2470 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • The Secret World of Connie Starr - cover

    The Secret World of Connie Starr

    Robbi Neal

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A stunning evocation of Australian life through the war to the 1950s, this novel is intimate and sweeping, immediate and dreamlike - a magical rendering of darkness and joy, and the beauty inherent in difference. For readers of Sarah Winman's Still Life, Trent Dalton's All Our Shimmering Skies and Rosalie Ham's The Dressmaker. 
      
    Connie Starr was always a difficult child. Her mother knew as soon as Connie entered the world that day in Ballarat in 1934 and opened her lungs to scream, there was more chaos in the world than before and it wouldn't leave until Connie did. From the safety of a branch high in her lemon tree where she speaks to angels, she sees the world for what it is - a swirling mass of beauty and darkness, of trauma and family, of love and war and truth and lies - lies that might just undo her and drive her to a desperate act. 
    This ambitious, complex and insightful novel intertwines numerous stories of lives from before World War II and beyond, recreating with intimacy and breadth a world that is now lost to us. This book is a brightly coloured patchwork quilt of everything from shoes to polio, lemon trees to rivers, death to life that melds into one beautiful, luminous work of art. 
    'The Secret World of Connie Starr will set the literary firmament ablaze. This brilliant, quintessentially Australian ode to difference, transcends time and place - it's an achingly lovely tale that shines long after the last page.' Karen Brooks, author of The Good Wife of Bath  
    HarperCollins Australia 2022
    Show book
  • While the Town Slept - cover

    While the Town Slept

    William W. Johnstone, J. A....

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The latest blazing, breakneck adventure in the Tim Colter Western series by the bestselling legends of historical Westerns in which the assassination of President Grant is on the line. 
     
     
     
    Wyoming Territory, 1873. Tim Colter and his trusted guide, mountain man Jed Reno, are on the trail of a vicious gang of train robbers when they happen upon a bloody and shocking scene. Lying on the ground, barely breathing, a Secret Service agent has been left for dead in the wake of a brutal ambush. His final words: "President Grant . . . assassination . . . Dugan . . . trust nobody." 
     
     
     
    It's a message that chills Colter and Reno to the bone. President Ulysses S. Grant is scheduled to arrive soon in Cheyenne. Dugan is a former Confederate guerilla who leads a notorious gang of cutthroats. And the agent's last words—"trust nobody"—suggest this conspiracy could reach to the highest levels of American power. Colter and Reno are determined to stop the assassins by any means possible—even if they have to enter hell itself, better known as Dugan's Den. But to get there, they'll have to bust a lady outlaw out of prison then convince her to take them to Dugan's hideout—with a lunatic killer on their tail and the president on a collision course with death . . .
    Show book
  • The Secret War of 1834 - ZOMBIES VS STEAMPUNK - cover

    The Secret War of 1834 - ZOMBIES...

    B. LeClere

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A Tale of Transformation and Innovation. 
    A good man's quest had gone horribly wrong, causing a war weary young nation to struggle to survive. 
    In 1834 a doctor was searching for a way to cure his family and patients. He accidentally created a condition more terrible than the world has ever known. Two warring cultures must now band together to combat this new foe. 
    Across a mostly untamed America, where steamships and horseback are the fastest means of transportation, they knew they must outrun this enemy that was sweeping through the country like a virus. 
    Creating new weapons and adapting forgotten methods, they needed to prepare for an altogether different kind of war. 
    For if invention's mother is necessity, it's father must surely be desperation.
    Show book
  • O Pioneers! - cover

    O Pioneers!

    Willa Cather

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    tbc
    Show book
  • The Attack on the Mill - cover

    The Attack on the Mill

    Emile Zola

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The Attack on the Mill is a powerful tale of love, loyalty, and devastation set against the backdrop of the Franco-Prussian War. On the eve of a joyous wedding at Father Merlier's idyllic mill in the Lorraine countryside, the drums of war grow louder. As Prussian forces descend upon the village of Rocreuse, peace is shattered in a single day. What begins as a celebration quickly becomes a siege, and young lovers Françoise and Dominique are thrust into a fight for survival, honor, and one another. 
    With vivid natural imagery and emotional depth, Émile Zola paints a haunting picture of the personal cost of war. This tragic novella is brought to life by the rich, immersive narration of Etombè Edembe, capturing both the pastoral beauty and the horrifying intensity of a nation torn apart. 
    Perfect for fans of classic European literature, war stories, and emotional dramas.
    Show book
  • Waiting for Wovoka - Envoys of Good Cheer and Liberty - cover

    Waiting for Wovoka - Envoys of...

    Gerald Vizenor

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    In the summer of 1962, a group of young Native American puppeteers travel in a converted school bus from the White Earth Reservation to the Century 21 Exposition, World's Fair in Seattle, Washington. The five Natives, three young men and two young women, have endured abandonment, abuse, poverty, and find solace, humor, and courage with a mute puppeteer—a Native woman in her seventies who writes original dream songs, and creates hand puppets and ironic parleys that mock the ghosts of authority. Dummy Trout, the mute puppeteer, also figured in Native Tributes and Satie on the Seine. The troupe attends a performance of Waiting for Godot by Samuel Beckett and they create a puppet parley for Wovoka, the inspiration of the Native American Ghost Dance Religion.
    Show book