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Dreamers Of The Day [Paperback]

Mary Doria Russell
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Black Swan (12 Mar 2009)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0552774855
  • ISBN-13: 978-0552774857
  • Product Dimensions: 12.8 x 2.4 x 19.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 487,067 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Mary Doria Russell
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Product Description

Book Description

The stunning new historical novel from the bestselling author of A Thread of Grace and The Sparrow.

Product Description

'I am sure of this much: my little story has become your history. You won't really understand your times until you understand mine...'

Reeling from the aftermath of the twin tragedies of the Great War and the influenza epidemic, diffident schoolteacher Agnes Shanklin has taken the trip of a lifetime: to Egypt and the Holy Land. But her arrival at Cairo's Semiramis Hotel coincides with an event that will change history. For the year is 1921 and the Cairo Peace Conference is about to preside over nothing less than the creation of the modern Middle East. At first Agnes acts as a welcome sounding board for the historic players - Churchill, T. E. Lawrence and Lady Gertrude Bell among them - poised to invent the nations of Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Jordan and so decide the fate of the Arab world. Yet as the tumultuous days pass, she attracts the attention of a charismatic German spy and is inexorably drawn into the duplicitous, dangerous world of geopolitical intrigue...

As enlightening as it is entertaining, this compelling, passionately felt novel casts brilliant and perceptive light on what lies behind so many of today's headlines.


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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
By Patrick Shepherd TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
In her prior books, Russell has clearly shown that she knows how to delineate very real characters. With this book of historical fiction, centered around the events of 1918-1921, this attribute shows just as clearly, with a fine portrait of Agnes Shanklin, her protagonist, but perhaps even more significantly, her pictures of historical luminaries such as T. E. Lawrence and Winston Churchill.

Agnes has quite an inferiority complex engendered by her mother's constant criticism, a lack of self confidence about her looks and her abilities. The first section of this book, details her upbringing and shows just who she is, a living, breathing person. Almost as a sidelight to this exemplary characterization, this section informs the reader of effects of the Great Influenza pandemic of 1918-9 and is a great depiction of the mores, customs, and daily life of that time, making some great commentary on just why that way of life disappeared so suddenly, to be replaced by the `roaring twenties'. But this first section of the book is merely an introduction, for when the flu kills off everyone else in her family, leaving Agnes the sole inheritor of various estates, she decides to take a trip to Egypt and the Holy Land, inspired by her late sister's forays in this area of the world.

The second section is the heart of this novel, as Agnes arrives in Egypt and through some fortuitous circumstances becomes a distant part of the group of people present at time in Cairo, from Churchill and Lawrence to Lady Gertrude Bell, who would eventually determine the political landscape of the middle east for many years to come, and the effects of which are still being felt today. It is a little bit unbelievable that such a relatively `minor' person such as Agnes would become part of this group (such things are always a problem when trying to insert a fictional character into a historical setting), but Russell does a good and somewhat humorous job of setting this up, and it must be remembered that the European `community' in Cairo at this time was quite small and insular. Once you accept that Agnes has been `adopted' by these luminaries, the rest follows quite logically, and this is where this book shines. Russell's depiction of the sights, sounds, smells, climate, and history of this region are remarkable, even if some of the history takes the form of essays - these blocks of expository material fit very well with the rest of the story, and give the reader a lot of context for current events.

Right alongside this travelogue is her depiction of the people surrounding her. T. E. Lawrence comes across as a far more complicated man than the character shown in the Lawrence of Arabia movie (although Peter O'Toole's finely nuanced depiction did much to hint at the depths of the man), and the Churchill shown here is not the famous Prime Minister of WWII fame, but rather the fairly lowly government functionary still trying to live down the debacle of Gallipoli. At the same time as this Cairo peace conference was making its way to becoming history, Agnes herself blossoms, becoming romantically involved with a local German, and finding that her thoughts, opinions, and actions are important, that she can be more than just a mouse.

The final section, which details some of Agnes' life after returning to America, is not as strong as the rest of the book, as it is told from a metaphysical viewpoint that doesn't quite jibe with the tone or feeling of the rest of the book, with a strong `message' component that is probably not necessary - Russell has already gotten this message across in the earlier sections, and much more effectively by `showing' rather than `telling'.

This book was clearly well and heavily researched, bringing to life a period of history that few Americans have any knowledge of, even though the events depicted here have a strong influence on our current involvement in the region. Russell provides a decent bibliography of her sources, a great aid for anyone wishing to find out more about this time and place.

An excellent book in many ways, perhaps not quite as strong as her The Sparrow, but definitely worth reading.

---Reviewed by Patrick Shepherd (hyperpat)
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Dreams and mirages 8 Mar 2009
By J. Scott-mandeville VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
Dreamers of the Day by Mary Doria Russell is a romantic novel which is set in Egypt and Palestine during the important historical period at the end of the First World War when the Middle East became a political melting pot of Europeans and Arabs, vying with each other for control of the region. The novel nicely interweaves real characters such as Lawrence of Arabia and Lady Gertrude Bell, as well as Churchill, who are in Cairo for the Peace Conference.

The construction of the novel is unusual and quirky. The American heroine of the story is a spinster schoolteacher, Agnes Shanklin, of 40 years old and her narration reflects that maturity as well as inexperience. A central character is her dog, Rosie, who pushes her dachsund nose into the narrative at regular intervals, and the influence of her dead mother crops up intermittently. Romance appears on the scene, but the essence of the novel lies in the Egyptian and Holy Land setting and the enigmatic personae of Lawrence and Bell. The ending clarifies the beginning and is a vindication of all that has gone before.

Despite rather contrived dialogue and a rather pedestrian style at times, Mary Doria Russell succeeds in creating a lively story flecked with interesting details and topical reference so that the novel informs as well as entertains. Of her books I found 'Thread of Grace' a much more riveting and moving read, but Dreamers of the Day has much to recommend it.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
a disappointment 9 Oct 2008
Format:Paperback
Having read and really enjoyed the author's previous three books (A Thread of Grace, The Sparrow and The Children of God), I was eager to dive into this one. But what a disappointment! "Dreamers ..." seems to have been written by another person. I thought I was going to experience a sensitive handling of complex Middle Eastern political history but there is no depth in this story: a 1920s American spinster takes off on a romantic trip to Egypt with her silly dachshund, whose exploits are described in detail, including its frequent crapping in inconvenient places. The woman gets entangled in a pseudo love affair with a married German spy, but doesn't care and enjoys it anyway. It's like a story out of "Grazia"!. The book reads like a superficial travelogue and the parts dealing with real historical figures like T.E. Lawrence and Winston Churchill are unbelievably bad: Churchill is a caricature, an objectional imperialist buffoon, while T.E. Lawrence, though treated sympathetically, makes little or no impression on the reader. I feel that the whole point in the book for the author was the "sermon" at the end, where she tells the reader what he/she should think about the Middle East and War in general. Come on Mary Doria Russel! What has happened to you!
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