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Legion of the White Tiger

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The year is 38BC, Cerdic and his explorer uncle, Mago the Carthaginian, are on a long and arduous journey of discovery from the Mediterranean to the land of the people who live ‘behind the North Wind’. These are the Chinese, who manufacture the miraculous and beautiful material now known as silk. They are joined on their trek by a couple who they rescue from the sea – a young Roman, Festus, and his tongueless slave. They too are on a quest: to find Festus’ father, who did not return after the bloody battle of Carrhae some sixteen years before.
It is no easy journey as the small party laboriously crosses the hundreds of miles of desert and mountain. There are constant dangers: they are attacked by hostile tribes, and they are finally captured by the dreaded leader of the Hsiung-nu (the Huns), the Fire King Jzh-Jzh, and his warrior daughter, Xandria.
This is an exceptionally exciting story, and yet it is more than a tale of high adventure. It is also a comparison of cultures: the ordered, inflexible nobility of the Romans is contrasted with the brutal bloodlust of the Huns. It presents a fascinating picture of a little-known period of history.

191 pages, Hardcover

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About the author

James Watson

242 books5 followers
For Nobel Laureate and co discoverer of DNA, see James D. Watson

James [1 space] Watson – Radical
James [2 spaces] Watson – Photographer (page: James Watson)
James [3 spaces] Watson – Novelist (page: James Watson)
James [4 spaces] Watson – War (page: James Watson)
James [5 spaces] Watson – Vietnam (page: James Watson)
James [6 spaces] Watson – Novelist (page: James Watson)
James [7 spaces] Watson – Marketing
James [8 spaces] Watson – Dogs (page: James Watson)
James [9 spaces] Watson – Scottish poet (page: James Watson)
James [10 spaces] Watson – Stamps (page: James Watson)
James [11 spaces] Watson – Media (page: James Watson)
James [12 spaces] Watson – Architecture
James [13 spaces] Watson – Romance (page: James Watson)
James [17 spaces] Watson – Fantasy novels (page: James Watson)

In 1799, James Watson, who became a much-imprisoned freethought publisher, was born in Yorkshire. As a young worker in Leeds, he joined a radical reading club and became a freethinker. At age 23, Watson moved to London to assist publisher Richard Carlile at his shop, taking over when Carlile was imprisoned in 1822. Carlile had expressly opened the shop to publish and sell periodicals that would challenge "Six Acts," a suppressive law passed in 1819. Watson was arrested in 1823 for selling Elihu Palmer's Principles of Nature, and was sentenced to a year at Coldbath Fields prison for blasphemy. He took advantage of his confinement to read rationalist writers. Released in April 1824, he learned the skills of the printing trade directly from Carlile, and also worked for another radical publisher, Julian Hibbert. In 1827, Watson joined the Owenites (see Robert Owen), and became an agent for Owen' Cooperative Trading Association. In 1830, Watson opened his own publishing house, specializing in hand printed and bound volume-classics by freethinkers such as Thomas Paine, Lord Byron and Percy Bysshe Shelley, selling for one shilling each. In 1831, the irreverent publisher organized a feast to counter a government-ordered fast. In 1832, he began publishing Working Man's Friend, an unstamped newspaper (stamp laws had a chilling effect on publishers of newspapers and pamphlets), for which he was sent to prison for 6 months in 1833. For selling Poor Man's Guardian, Watson was imprisoned 6 months in 1834-35. In the 1840s, Watson campaigned against blasphemy laws, and, with George Holyoake, published the anti-Christian journal, The Reasoner. D. 1874.

An untaxed and absolutely free press became his main object in later years. He died at Burns College, Hamilton Road, Lower Norwood, on 29 November 1874, and was buried in Norwood cemetery. A grey granite obelisk erected by friends commemorated his "brave efforts to secure the rights of free speech". A photographic portrait was in the Memoir by William James Linton.

More: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Wa...

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August 5, 2011
Good holiday kid's book read - a mystery of history I now want to research myself
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