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Fall of Giants Chunky Read with reading schedule
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message 101:
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Irene
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Nov 03, 2010 08:38AM

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I am with you. I have read 90% and can't take it anymore. I am taking a break and reading some Stephen King. I will finish it, eventually...The book really grabbed me at the beginning, but it has gotten away from the characters stories and gone to much too into the nations conflicts, for me.
I do like Fallet and I plan to read
The Pillars of the Earth after this one.


Pillars is really good.

I have thrown books across the room in frustration. :)


As for those of you who are finding this a book not as up to par as his others, I am afraid I have to agree with it somewhat.
What is annoying me somewhat is that his historical facts are off and that is annoying.
As for Pillars it is superior in style to this, I hate admitting that!


Oh I like it. It is that it is too much war in it for me. This is my first Follet book and I am impressed with him. I want to read his other books.




I haven't figured if my lack of connection with any of the characters is due to the fact that the chapters switch character stories so frequently or if its something else.



***Spoiler****
I was very happy she married this other guy and didn't fall for Fitz when he proposed her to be lovers after he found her again. Good!!

There is alo a bit of incredulity limiting my identification with characters. I am having a hard time not believing that Lev is not at the bottom of Lake Erie. True, he is arrogant and wreckless, but making out with a lounge singer in a public park immediately after he was caught by his father-in-law, and in a city where Wyalof (or however it is spelled) is head of such a large network, stretches all reason. Why does Wyalof allow himself and his daughter to be humiliated over and over again when no one would have investigated the disappearance of an insignificant Russian immigrant. That is just one example of incredulity. Maud's family's willingness to allow her to openly engage in radical politics, and even to fund her efforts, Ethel's rise to such a position of skilled leadership with her limited educational and social background, and so on.

I am hoping he will pull it together in the next novel as Hitler will (I am sure) be the focal piece in it.

Zimmermann Telegram
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The Zimmermann Telegram as it was sent from Washington to Mexico
Map showing Mexican territory in 1917 (dark green), territory promised to Mexico in the Zimmermann telegram (light green), and original Mexican territory (red line).
The Zimmermann Telegram (or Zimmermann Note; German: Zimmermann-Depesche; Spanish: Telegrama Zimmermann) was a 1917 diplomatic proposal from the German Empire to Mexico to make war against the United States. The proposal was declined by Mexico, but angered Americans and led in part to the declaration of war in April.
The message came as a coded telegram dispatched by the Foreign Secretary of the German Empire, Arthur Zimmermann, on January 16, 1917, to the German ambassador in Washington, D.C., Johann von Bernstorff, at the height of World War I. On January 19, Bernstorff, per Zimmermann's request, forwarded the telegram to the German ambassador in Mexico, Heinrich von Eckardt. Zimmermann sent the telegram in anticipation of the resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare by Germany on February 1, an act which German Chancellor Bethmann-Hollweg feared would draw the neutral United States into war on the side of the Allies.[1] The telegram instructed Ambassador Eckardt that if the United States appeared likely to enter the war, he was to approach the Mexican Government with a proposal for military alliance. He was to offer Mexico material aid in the reclamation of territory lost during the Mexican-American War (the Southeastern section of the area of the Mexican Cession of 1848) and the Gadsden Purchase, specifically the American states of Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona. Eckardt was also instructed to urge Mexico to help broker an alliance between Germany and the Japanese Empire.
The Zimmermann Telegram was intercepted and decoded by the British cryptographers of Room 40.[2] The revelation of its contents in the American press on March 1 caused public outrage that contributed to the United States' declaration of war against Germany and its allies on April 6.


In continuation of the above question, if you had to identify one of the main characters’ stories as one that would make a good “stand-alone” novel, which would it be? Why do you think his/her story would make an enjoyable book on its own?

And for that same reason, the book may not had been that engaging to begin with if the author had started with somebody's else story.

As for a starting point, I think that Falett starts in the West because it wold more accessible to Americans than Russia. Older readers would have lived through the Cold War and younger readers might have little awareness of pre-Revolutionary Russia. But, England pre WWI is much like the USA at that time. Further, I suspect that Fallett is sympathetic to the libral causes. He depicts monarchs as ineffectual and a bit dim. In debates, the poorly educated Grigori, Billy and Ethel can make the far better educated and cosmopolitan opponents appear stupid, in articulate as if they consrvative spokesmen just repeat what has always been with no individual thought. By putting the Williams family at the start of the novel, he invites the reader to develop a relationship with this family of minors before they can do so with the wealthy; they become our first friend so to speak.

I think Ethel and Grigori's stories could be a stand alone novel. There is just so much going on in their lives that make that a possibility. Of course the war is a character all in and of itself. I love the way Follett makes the telling so real, so emotional, so heart rending. The characters are real, they seem like people not wooden characters, not pieces on a game board. He gives them substance and identity and makes them important to the reader.

From Follett's website: Ken Follett was born in Cardiff, Wales, on the 5th of June, 1949. His father was a tax inspector, and “now that he has retired, he does my tax returns for me”. Like many young couples bringing up a family in post-war Britain, Martin Follett and his wife Veenie were not able to provide their children with many luxuries. From a very early age, Ken was creating imaginary worlds for himself.
“My mother told me stories all the time. I don't know whether I inherited it from her or just acquired it under her influence, but by the time I was seven years old I was an imaginative child.”
Ken was also reading from a very young age. His parents were devout born-again Christians and would not allow their children to watch television or go to the cinema, and Ken found his escape in books. “With no TV or radio, and no Saturday morning pictures which all the other kids used to go to, reading was my entertainment. I didn't have many books of my own and I've always been grateful for the public library. Without free books I would not have become a voracious reader, and if you are not a reader you are not a writer."
Ken's family moved from Cardiff to London when he was ten years old, and since then he has spent most of his life in London, he speaks with a North London, rather than a Cardiff accent; “I think of myself as a Welsh Londoner”.
I think, to some extent, Follett put a lot of himself, into the character of Billy. I think he wanted us to identify with Billy too, so that we could see that families with almost nothing, had to sacrifice their sons to this war.

I didn't find a lot of historical inaccuracies in the book. As a matter of fact, I liked the way Follett worked the characters into the history and used the characters to support the characteristics of the different countries. For example - the descriptions of the differences between the British and the German trenches and the differences in their approaches to war and battles; -- the contrast of the orderliness, planning, research of the Germans vs. the sloppiness and egotistical lack of planning on the part of the British. I thought he worked hard to tie the causes of the beginning of the war and the reasons for losses in battle etc. to the personalities of the countries involved. It helped me to understand these nuances in a way that reading history has failed to do.
I also noticed how characters were being prepped for the part they would play in the sequel. Did you notice how Fitz has been changing into someone who is bitter and intolerant? I thought he was somewhat arrogant and snobbish at the beginning, but by the end of the book, he was totally unlikeable.
Anyway, just a few thoughts...

Along these lines, discuss the characters who abandoned their respective faiths. What caused them to walk away from their beliefs? To what end?

I thought each character acted according to their own strengths or weaknesses. I might be missing something however in the religion element. I thought the war was the major impetus in the book.


Look how parents would disown a child when they didn't marry who the parent thought they should.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Pillars of the Earth (other topics)The Woman in White (other topics)
The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists (other topics)