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The Abyssinian: A Novel

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Title: The Abyssinian: A Novel
by Jean-Christophe Rufin
ISBN: 0-393-32109-6
Publisher: W.W. Norton & Company
Pub. Date: November, 2000
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $14.95
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Average Customer Rating: 3.73 (30 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 5
Summary: Wonderful historical fiction...
Comment: According to the dust jacket, THE ABYSSINIAN by Jean-Christophe Rufin is a first novel. If so, I hope Rufin writes many more books because THE ABYSSINIAN is one of the best works of fiction I've read in a while. Rufin is a French physician who has spent many years working with Doctor's Without Borders. His writing reflects his medical background as well as his love of and regard for his fellow human beings.

Rufin is both romantic and a realist. A major thread in the plot of THE ABYSSINIAN involves a romance between his protagonist Jean-Baptiste Poncet, unlicensed lower-class medical practicioner living in Cairo, and Alix Maillet, the beautiful upper-class daughter of the French Ambassador to Egypt. Rufin's story is made real by his deft interweaving of actual historical events and evocative fictional episodes he has crafted from his obvious knowledge of the era and it's political machinations.

The basis of the book is an event that occurred in 1699 when Louis XIV sent an embassy of ministers, Jesuits, and a physician to the Negus or King of Abyssinian. The Negus was sick and admitted the strangers only because they accompanied the physician whom he hoped would provide a cure for his malady. In the 17th Century, Abyssinia was a mysterious Coptic Christian country closed to outsiders for centuries. The nation-states of Europe and the Muslim countries of the near east struggled for control of Abyssinia which lay in North Africa southeast of Egypt. A desire for economic gain through trade lay behind the French King's offer of a physician to the Negus.

But other factors were at play. In the 17th Century, conflict continued between various Roman Catholic orders, between Catholics and Protestants, and between Christians and Muslims, all of whom sought relgious dominance. THE ABYSSINIAN is populated with French Jesuits, Italian Domincans, and Muslim imams all struggling to convert Abyssinians. The Jesuits' goal was to use the King's embassy as a means of penetrating the Coptic populace for the purpose of proselytization.

Like Dumas' action-thrillers, Rufin's book is filled with sword-play, gallantry, and back-stabbing, but unlike Dumas, Rufin's characters are fully developed. Poncet's sidekick, the apothocary Maitre Juremi is vividly drawn. Both Alix and Francoise (Juremi's love interest) are "real" women. Poncet is an honorable young man who seeks to win his fortune and claim his love's hand without selling his soul. His mission is dangerous and as he attempts to make his way back to Alix, the reader will wonder if he can possibly accomplish his goal in an age 'sans merci'. Long after you've read THE ABYSINIAN, you will recall the vivid imagery of an exotic place now lost to the world though civil war, and the wrenching suffering of a pair of lovers separated by the cruel irony of chance.

Rating: 3
Summary: An engaging, enjoyable "fluff" read
Comment: ______________________________________________
Fluff or not? Fluff - thus the 3 stars.
______________________________________________

Buried in the not-so-literary prose are some true nuggets of lyricism. Although few, these nuggets help round out an engaging tale that make for an enjoyable, relaxing read. Set in an exotic locale in a romanatic era its easy to love the often foolish but endearingly daring Poncet, and to root for the frustratingly stoic Juremi. The host of egocentric politians and enigmatic foreign rulers are augmented by Murad, the loveable bufoon, and the courageous Francois.

+: fun and imaginative with loveable charaters and historical depth - an easy read.
-: low on lyricism, a little choppy, and left me feeling a little cheated - it seemed as if there was so much left out.

Rating: 4
Summary: Entertaining and Diverting
Comment: I really enjoyed this book and its sequel. They are both "simply" adventure stories and are not on a par with other timeless literature or history/political analysis, but they took me to a place and time about which I know only a little and that I would otherwise never be able to see. The characters are interesting if not so developed as, say, Holden Caulfield or any of Mary Renault's.

That being said, I was sad when the adventure was over and the events, settings, and characters stayed with me for months. I hope there will be a third book. I haven't had this much fun for quite a while.

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