Ratings39
Average rating3.6
Fusing historical events with a gripping fictional narrative, this first book in the Mongoliad trilogy reveals a secret history of Europe in the thirteenth century. As the Mongols swept across Asia and were poised to invade Europe in 1241, a small band of warriors, inheritors of an ancient secret tradition, conceived a desperate plan to stop the attack. They must kill the Khan of Khans; if they fail, all of Christendom will be destroyed. In the late nineteenth century a mysterious group of English martial arts aficionados provided Sir Richard F. Burton, well-known expert on exotic languages and historical swordsmanship, a collection of long-lost manuscripts to translate--the lost chronicles of this desperate fight to save Europe. Burton's translations were lost, until a team of amateur archaeologists discovered them in the ruins of a mansion in Trieste. From the translations and from the original source material, the epic tale of The Mongoliad was recreated.
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5 primary books22 released booksThe Foreworld Saga is a 22-book series with 22 released primary works first released in 2001 with contributions by Neal Stephenson, Erik Bear, and Greg Bear.
Reviews with the most likes.
The best kind of storytelling for me - I had to keep going to see what happened. I have no idea about the historical accuracy of this book, but I plan to find out! Looking forward to reading Vol. 2.
A decent start to a series. An interesting experiment in semi-historical fantasy, being released online. This is the first of these stories published in novel form..
I enjoy Stephenson, but didn't really get any feel for which parts he may have written, but it was a good fantasy book, just not spectacular...
Slow start, exciting middle, abrupt ending. Main characters were interesting. I'm guessing the authors consider the whole series as a cohesive story and just stopped book one when they reached a certain number of chapters.