Imagen del autor

Suzanne Alles Blom (1948–2012)

Autor de Inca: The Scarlet Fringe

1 Obra 29 Miembros 1 Reseña

Sobre El Autor

Incluye el nombre: Suzanne Allés Blom

Obras de Suzanne Alles Blom

Inca: The Scarlet Fringe (2000) 29 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre legal
Blom, Suzanne Allés
Otros nombres
Blom, Sue
Fecha de nacimiento
1948-03-28
Fecha de fallecimiento
2012-06-23
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de fallecimiento
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA
Causa de fallecimiento
cancer (intestinal)
Lugares de residencia
Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
Sioux City, Iowa, USA
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA
Ocupaciones
tax preparer
Organizaciones
VISTA

Miembros

Reseñas

This is an alternate-history novel which postulates that things could have been different if the internal politics of the Incan empire had been just a little bit less disorganized, and they had readied themselves to take on the Spanish invasion spearheaded by Pizarro.
Although I often find alternate-history annoying, as it clutters up my head with inaccurate information, Blom usefully includes a blurb at the head of each chapter explaining what actually happened, historically. And, her research into Incan culture seems well-done - one can certainly learn a lot more about indigenous Americans from this book than, for example, Apocalypto! (The movie certainly had some nice visual effects and some [well, MANY] good chase scenes, but I would not have guessed it would be possible to make an entire film and include so LITTLE about the actual cuture of the people one was talking about!)
Anyway, back to Blom! While the book is interesting, her habit of translating every character's name into English is stylistically off-putting. I got rather tired of trying to put a face/character to monikers like "Exemplary Fortune," "Young Royal Happiness," and "Potato Flower." I think this is why it took me so long to finish this book!
The other problem is that Blom was definitely expecting to write a sequel. I don't know if she's still working on it, or whether the book didn't sell well enough for TOR to publish the sequel. But the book has two separate plotlines. The first deals with Atahualpa (Exemplary Fortune) encountering a captured Spaniard, and gradually coming to reach a degree of cross-cultural understanding - and adopting him to train Incas in Spanish fighting techniques.
The second concerns a young man, Hummingbird/Felipe who runs away and is semi-coerced into serving Pizarro, although his heart remains true to his people.
In the book, the two plotlines have not yet intersected at the end, and the outcome of this clash of cultures is still uncertain.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
AltheaAnn | Feb 9, 2016 |

Premios

Estadísticas

Obras
1
Miembros
29
Popularidad
#460,290
Valoración
3.0
Reseñas
1
ISBNs
3