Reviews

Pavane by Keith Roberts

ornithopter1's review

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1.0

DNF. Painstaking (and DULL) in its detail. No clear purpose in its various vignettes of an alternate history's society. No clear theme. No questions (other than, 'what is the point of all this?'). No answers. I was utterly unengaged with it. Read beyond the halfway point and still found nothing of interest. That makes two DNFs in a row for me - something I never imagined doing before.

indianajane's review

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2.0

This is a murky book. I felt like I had to spend a way too much mental energy trying to figure out what was going on.

gillothen's review

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5.0

Wonderful alternate history. It really doesn't date.

tripleslick's review

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adventurous mysterious medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

3.5

fourtriplezed's review

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4.0

I am an admirer of the music of Ed Kuepper. From his early days in seminal punk rock band The Saints, followed by the amazingly underappreciated Laughing Clowns, through to film score and solo recordings, I seem to have been along for the musical ride, be that live or via studio recordings. He recently released his 50th album Lost Cities. This release was the first new material for 8 years and for me personally it was worth the wait. The opening track is called Pavane, a word I did not know. I initially just thought it a lovely dreamy atmospheric song based on a dance as per a wiki search. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pavane No I was wrong! Ed Kuepper played a live gig that I attended recently and I was surprised to hear him tell his audience that the song was about a very “poetical” book he had read called Pavane by Keith Roberts. Well that blew away what I had thought the song was about. With that I had to read this book.

To give Ed Kuepper his due his use of the word “Poetical” was a good choice. I have now finished the book and have to admit that there is certain descriptive feel about Keith Roberts writing and poetical is certainly a very fair description, lyrical would also be a good descriptive I might add. For a novel that is alternate history supposedly in the Sci Fi genre I have come out the end of the book feeling that the writing itself is beyond the sci fi fantasy pulp that is the vast majority of that genre.

The book itself gets its title, in my opinion, from a beautiful philosophical conversation in the final chapter, or Measure as the author calls them, between two of the characters. “It’s like a . . . dance somehow, a minuet or a Pavane, somewhat stately somewhat pointless, with all its steps set out.” So I suppose that we are reading an alternative history that is “somewhat stately”, yes it is, and “somewhat pointless” and indeed that it is, it never happened.

The six Measures themselves are captivating. There is a loose thread that (eventually) joins them together in the excellent final Measure, Corfes Gate. These alternate England Measures covers all social classes, peasant through to aristocracy. There is a feudal system that supports the suppression of technology, an England as a poor nation with class suppression from an authoritarian Catholic Church. The author also delves into the pagan past of what once was. The superstitions of the rural peoples is there in the background with some beautifully written prose about the Old Ones. All a delight to read.

Most of the events take place in Dorset. Having had the pleasure of a visit to Dorset I was heading to the maps to check out the places mentioned. Lulworth Cove is a fond memory, as was a night in Lyme. No Regis tacked on in this alternate history. Dorset is a truly beautiful part of the world and at times the author gave the county a certain poetical atmosphere that was a delight to read. The author also used Romanised place names at times and had me looking up the modern equivalent.

This is a fine read, very good indeed but for one flaw. The final part of the book is a Coda that to me just feels tacked on for the sake of it. It lacks the spirit of the Measures and almost killed my own personal thoughts as to what the future of this alternate England was. Almost but not quite. I will reread this book one day. Thanks Ed Kuepper for bringing this to my attention.

sharonskinner's review

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3.0

Lovely language, but a bit disjointed. And there were times that the language seemed to get in the way of the story.

While the last chapter, "Coda," tied the rest of the book together, this book seemed more like a collection of short stories than a novel.

ahammel87's review

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4.0

3.5/5

tronella's review against another edition

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3.0

The world building is great, the plot and writing style didn't really do it for me.

btmarino84's review

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4.0

Excellent and creepy book of linked short stories. Some short stories were better than others but they all tended to pick up and gradually show how they were important to the world the book took place in. I wish there was more, because it really was a fascinating world.

inciminci's review

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2.0

Well, not mine at all.