Abidi, Azhar Passarola Rising Review

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Abidi, Azhar Passarola Rising
4.5 stars
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Harriet Klausner's Review of Abidi, Azhar Passarola Rising

16th Dec 2005

Overall Rating

4.5 stars
  • Value for money
    4.5 stars

Passarola Rising
Azhar Abidi
Viking, Jan 2006, $21.95
ISBN: 0670034657

After leaving Brazil for Portugal and gaining financial sponsoring in Lisbon, by 1731 Bartolomeo Louren is ready to test his airship, the Passarola in front of His Majesty Joao V. However, Bartolomeo's flying machine angers Cardinal Conti, who believes that if man was meant to fly, God would have given Adam wings. With the force of the Portuguese Inquisition, he forces Bartolomeo and his younger brother Alexandre to flee via their airship to France.

French King Louis XV supports Bartolomeo's efforts to improve on the Passarola, as the enlightened monarch sees great military advantage in fighting enemies on the ground from the air. Meanwhile the Acadmie des Sciences hire the siblings to measure distances to the polar circle, which they undertake. On the dangerous trek, Alex claims to have seen a great city, but no proof is offered, and his older brother admits he never saw the phantom sprawl. After a return to France, Alex goes home to Brazil as the adventures are over for him, but Bartolomeo starts a new epic in India.

Based on the real account of two eighteenth century brothers, PASSAROLA RISING is a superb historical fiction novel that brings to life the first half of the eighteenth century through the passion of siblings who want to soar through the sky. The tale is told in a look back memoir like manner by Alexandre, who romanticizes and worships his creative talented and daring older brother. Readers will enjoy the adventures of two daredevils defying church, royalty, and other powers of society to live out their dream, even though for one of them it turns into a relatively short fantasy.

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