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Joan of Arc and her Marching Orders

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BfK No. 139 - March 2003

Cover Story
This issue's cover illustration, by David Roberts, is from Philip Ardagh's Heir of Mystery published by Faber in April. Philip Ardagh is interviewed by Jeff Hynds. Thanks to Faber for their help with this March cover.

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Joan of Arc and her Marching Orders

Phil Robins
 Philip Reeve
(Hippo)
208pp, NON FICTION, 978-0439981101, RRP £4.99, Paperback
8-10 Junior/Middle
'Dead Famous'
Buy "Joan of Arc and her Marching Orders (Dead Famous)" on Amazon

Just occasionally a book in a series transcends the limitations of its format. Joan of Arc won't disappoint any fan of the 'Dead Famous' style of historical biography. There is the usual slapstick, melodrama, cartoons, jokes, anomalous newspaper reports and secret diaries. But Robins succeeds at the same time in conveying a great deal about the life and mind of medieval France. He and Phil Reeve lack nothing in humour and verve, even the jokes are a cut above the average. They also create a coherent narrative, full of powerful characters, none more extraordinary than Joan herself - driven, foolhardy, vulnerable, supremely self-confident, shrewd - whose sense of divine destiny transformed her, for a brief space, from a powerless peasant girl, barely more than a child, into the most powerful warrior in France. There have been more expensive and serious books on Joan for children, but none better than this. Robins does an excellent job of boiling down a considerable body of historical scholarship and, in his capable hands, the burlesque and carnival of the presentation serve to illuminate the weakness and duplicity of Joan's friends and foes alike and to heighten the achievements and tragedy of the maid herself.

Reviewer: 
Clive Barnes
5
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