A Needle in the Right Hand of God
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Narrated by:
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Stephen Hoye
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By:
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R. Howard Bloch
About this listen
Bloch opens with a gripping account of the event that inspired the Tapestry: the swift, bloody Battle of Hastings, in which the Norman bastard William defeated the Anglo-Saxon king Harold and laid claim to England under his new title, William the Conqueror. But to truly understand the connection between battle and embroidery, one must retrace the web of international intrigue and scandal that climaxed at Hastings. Bloch demonstrates how, with astonishing intimacy and immediacy, the artisans who fashioned this work of textile art brought to life a moment that changed the course of British culture and history.
Every age has cherished the Tapestry for different reasons and read new meaning into its enigmatic words and images. French nationalists in the mid-nineteenth century, fired by the Tapestry¿s evocation of military glory, unearthed the lost French epic "The Song of Roland", which Norman troops sang as they marched to victory in 1066. As the Nazis tightened their grip on Europe, Hitler sent a team to France to study the Tapestry, decode its Nordic elements, and, at the end of the war, with Paris under siege, bring the precious cloth to Berlin.
©2006 R. Howard Bloch (P)2007 Tantor Media Inc.Critic reviews
"The tapestry, now in a museum in Bayeux, brings history to life, and Bloch's splendid account does the same for the tapestry itself." ( Publishers Weekly)
What listeners say about A Needle in the Right Hand of God
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- boyd Saunders
- 27-02-20
some errors
on a positive note the books content regarding the actual making of the tapestry and the materials and skill involved was careful and interesting.
It is the historical content of events where the book falls short... silly mistakes like calling kent the ancestral lands of Harold Godwinson are simply untrue (although at the time of battle Leofwine was earl of kent). Other 'school boy errors' are present in the book and hint at a lack of knowledge of events on the ground.
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Overall
- Anthony_RC
- 09-03-11
A 50/50 thing...
Half of this book for me was enjoyable. The other half, largely tedious. This dividing line comes when the author moves from the historical/political/cultural and on to the details of the stitching, the cloth and the manual techniques involved. This to some extent is interesting, but within this book for me it went on for too long.
Either way, a good book with many interesting ideas. Would be 4* if it was edited for about 1 hours boredom.
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3 people found this helpful