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Dreaming the Bull (#2)
Dreaming the Bull (#2) | Manda Scott
3 posts | 5 read | 3 to read
The second part of the stunning fictionalization of the life of Britain's warrior queen, Boudica, immerses us in a world of druids and dreamers, warriors and lovers, passion and courage. Originally a trilogy, this is now a four-part series. Boudica means Bringer of Victory (from the early Celtic word boudeg). She was the last defender of the Celtic culture; the only woman openly to lead her warriors into battle and to stand successfully against the might of Imperial Rome -- and triumph. Book one, Dreaming the Eagle, took readers from Boudica's girlhood with the Eceni tribe to the climax of the two-day battle when she and her lover, Caradoc, faced the invading Romans. Believing her dead, Breaca's beloved brother, Ban, joined the Roman cause. Dreaming the Bull, the second book in this compelling series, continues the intertwined stories of Boudica, and Ban, now an officer in the Roman cavalry. They stand on opposite sides in a brutal war of attrition between the occupying army and the defeated tribes, each determined to see the other dead. In a country under occupation, Caradoc, lover to Breaca, is caught and faces the ultimate penalty. Only Ban has the power to save him, and Ban has spent the past ten years denying his past. Treachery divides these two; heroism brings them together again, changed out of all recognition -- but it may not be enough to heal the wounds. Dreaming the Bull is a heart-stopping story of war and of peace; of love, passion and betrayal; of druids and warring gods, where each life is sacred and each death even more so; and where Breaca and Ban learn the terrible distances they must travel to fulfill their own destinies. Through the summer, Cunomar came to recognize two different kinds of warriors. The smaller group consisted of those few men and women still alive who had known his mother before the two-day battle against the invading legions. These were her friends and they called her Breaca in the way Cunomar's father and the innermost circle of the honour guard still did. The rest, who had met her only in battle or, worse, knew her only by reputation, gave the warrior's salute in a way that was subtly different and hailed her as the Boudica, bringer of victory. She didn't enjoy that, but in the short span of his life, Cunomar had watched his mother become more comfortable with name, so that it settled on her like a worn cloak and she did not stiffen at the sound of it. He had heard her use the word herself for the first time that morning as a cold dawn sharpened the air and Nemain, the moon, lowered into her bed in the mountains. Breaca had stood on the back of her mare and addressed the massed ranks of warriors and dreamers, naming them all Boudegae, bringers of victory, and swearing before them that she would fight for as long as it took to rid the land of the invader. -- from Dreaming the Bull
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GingerAntics
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Breaca‘s brother, formerly Julius Valerius, née Bán, has gone on quite a journey in this book. I hated him and loved him again in turn. It was much harder to get into this book than the last, and I almost just gave it up. I wasn‘t sure I wanted to read the last two in the serious until almost the end. I am definitely continuing this journey. It‘s still hard to keep track of ages. I wish that were clearer. #Boudicca #mandascott #dreamingthebull

GingerAntics Where the first book was Breaca‘s book, as it were, this is definitely Bán‘s book. I know he doesn‘t know himself as that (or as Julius) anymore, but I can‘t stop thinking of him as Bán. I‘m just happy that he‘s chosen to come home, as much as he possibly ever could. Love that Breaca‘s daughter is clearly a dreamer, as she once hoped to be. 6y
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GingerAntics

Ban/Julius Valerius is now evil to his own people. Luckily he doesn‘t know it. Yet. His choices in this book have been so heart breaking.

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Liatrek
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Rainy day book store finds. All three were on my to buy list.