© 1989 by Ken Follett
Finally! A semi-bucket list item crossed off with
satisfaction.
The
Pillars of the Earth has been on my radar for over twenty
years. Many is the time I perused a library or book store shelf and plucked it
off for closer inspection. But the novel is a hefty investment and not for the
light-hearted. Recognizing this, I kicked it down the road far too many times
than I should have.
This was the first book I purchased after we moved
down here to Texas last July. And still it sat on my bookshelf for 14 months!
Yet at the tail end of September I took the plunge, and was well-rewarded for
it. My paperback copy has 983 pages, in six Parts plus a Prologue. It took me
exactly 40 days to wind my way through (though I did concurrently read two much
shorter books and a couple of plays by ancient Greek writer Aeschylus). That’s
just less than 25 pages a day, but in truth when I did read it I found it
difficult to put down.
The
Pillars of the Earth is a deceptively simple tale of a noble
goal – the building of a cathedral during the Middle Ages. The action – yes, it’s
a story with plenty of action – takes place over the span of 40 years, with
that prologue happening 12 years earlier (which sets up the backstories of two major
characters, slowly revealed over the course of the tale). Sure, there’s lots of
architectural exposition tossed in, but man did I not anticipate the amount of
political intrigue – often deadly political
intrigue – involved in constructing a House of God.
England at this time (the early-to-mid 1100s) is torn
by civil war, leading local lords, barons, and earls to rampage without
consequence throughout the countryside. The clergy stands as a bulwark against
this lawlessness; that is, the clergy that is not corrupt and willing
participants. The peasants are starving, the rents are too high, outlaws fill the
woodlands, and life is cheap, nasty, and short.
But a man named Brother Phillip, abbot of Kingsbridge,
wants to build a glorious cathedral to rival the masterpieces beginning to dot
the continent.
There’s a cast of about twenty regular characters
throughout the novel, mostly salt of the earth peasant types with a sprinkling
of royals to varying degrees and a handful of religious brothers. Some are nice
and decent, pleasant chaps and ladies you’d like to spend an evening with
eating roasted hare out in the forest. Some are a bit nastier, others quite
nasty. All the characters, however, are a thousand percent real,
multi-dimensional, filled with hopes and dreams and desire beyond filling that
belly with warm rabbit meat.
Of the protagonists I identified with Brother Phillip
the most. A touching backstory, a compelling rationale for building this
cathedral, and a simple man of the cloth, putting his faith wholeheartedly into
the thing which most of us do not. I also liked Tom the Builder, the man Phillip
saves from starvation to design and construct his new church.
But I think The Pillars
of the Earth shines best in its villains – two of the worst I’ve read this
side of a George R. R. Martin novel. One’s the brains, one’s the brawn. There’s
young William of Hamleigh, who attains earlhood though trickery and deceit and
the entire surrounding towns must suffer for it over many, many years, and who
nearly destroys Kingsbridge itself in one of his rages. And then there’s oily
Bishop Waleran, Phillip’s sworn enemy, who will stop at nothing to keep the cathedral
from being built – and I mean nothing.
True to the aforementioned Mr. Martin, these two villains and their henchmen
subject our heroes to a never-ending battering ram of brutality time and time
and time again.
It’s a very emotionally wringing written novel. There’s
GOOD – characters falling in love immediately; characters falling ever so
slowly in love over many months; the spiritual triumph of good over evil, which
involves the getting up time and again after being knocked down; and many extremely
clever (perhaps too clever, given the time period) solutions to outwit the
schemes of evil foes. There’s BAD – not one but two brutal rapes; pillaging and
murder; two hangings; a woman’s death in childbirth; a baby left out to die in
the cold (though it’s rescued by a man of God).
There’s a sequel which I may check out in a year or
two. Not sure. As good as the novel is, it did take something out of me. It was
an ordeal, but a worthy ordeal, much like the constructing of a cathedral in
England in the 1100s. I hope to become a better writer having read it.
Grade: solid A.
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