Merlin's Cave
 Location:  Home» Books » By Period » Random Acts of Heroic Love  
Merlin Site Links
  • Store Home
  • Site Home
  • Jewellery Auctions
  • Categories
    Apparel
    Baby
    Books
    DVD
    Electronics
    Health
    Home/Garden
    Jewellery & Watches
    Kitchen
    Music
    Outdoor Living
    Software
    Sport & Leisure
    Tools
    Toys
    VHS
    PC & Video Games
    Related Categories
    • By Period
    Fiction
    Subjects
    Books
    • General
    Fiction
    Subjects
    Books
    • Paperback Deals
    Regular Stores
    Special Features
    Books
    • English
    Language (feature_browse-bin)
    Refinements
    Books
    • Age (feature_two_browse-bin)
    Refinements
    Books
    • Paperback
    Format (binding_browse-bin)
    Refinements
    Books
    • Condition (condition-type)
    Refinements
    Books
    Subcategories
    By Period
    16th to 18th Century
    19th Century
    20th Century
    Contemporary Fiction: 1970 Onwards
    Age (feature_two_browse-bin)
    Ages 0-2
    Ages 3-4
    Ages 5-8
    Ages 9-11
    Ages 12-16
    Condition (condition-type)
    New
    Used
    Collectible

    Random Acts of Heroic Love

    Random Acts of Heroic Love

    enlarge enlarge 
    Author: Danny Scheinmann
    Publisher: Black Swan
    Category: Book

    List Price: £7.99
    Buy Used: £0.39
    You Save: £7.60 (95%)

    Qty 2 In Stock


    New (43) Used (37) from £0.39

    Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 55 reviews
    Sales Rank: 73

    Media: Paperback
    Pages: 432
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
    Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 4.8 x 1.1

    ISBN: 0552774227
    EAN: 9780552774222
    ASIN: 0552774227

    Publication Date: January 1, 2008
    Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
    Shipping: International shipping available
    Condition: We ship daily from the United Kingdom

    Similar Items:

      • Notes from an Exhibition
      • The Visible World
      • The Welsh Girl
      • The Book Thief
      • Blood River: A Journey to Africa's Broken Heart

    Customer Reviews:   Read 50 more reviews...

    5 out of 5 stars you NEED to read this book!!!   July 23, 2008
    Readaholic (Essex, UK)
    This book was not one that I would of chosen for myself, it was chosen for me as a present, which I tried to appear thankful for, believing that it would not be the type of book I would want to read.

    I was wrong! This is exactly the type of book that I feel everyone NEEDS to read. It tells of how love can drive people on to perform miracles. How losing love can make us despair and look for it in the most unlikely of places. And how after someone has left us we can move on with our lives, and become better people simply because we had that one perfect influence in our lives.

    This book is inspiring to read, it can encourage us to make the most of every moment in time. The content in the book is perhaps not as important as the lessons that can be learned from it, we seldom appreciate the real positive influences in our lives, and take the world for granted. This book tells us of people who did just that, and how hard, yet rewarding it was when they overcame various obstacles.

    I am not going to say too much about the story itself, as this is covered in detail by many over reviews on here. But I will say that the author of this book is a very clever man, who has obviously put a lot of time and energy into writing this masterpiece. This is a seamless story, which is so clever, and at the end helps you truly appreciate what life is all about, loving someone, and being loved in return.

    I was also surprised to know that the author of this book writes from the experiences of his grandfather who escaped a POW camp to find his true love. To share in this experience is a real delight!



    4 out of 5 stars Random notes on rather doubtful love   July 16, 2008
    Anita
    To tell the truth, it's been awhile I wanted to share my opinion on this, but was totally unable to "count" the stars. It's definitely not a one-star book, I think, but sometimes it scarcely rises above two, sometimes it almost reaches five, though. So my four stars is not a very credible evaluation.

    Sorry, I can't give an exact quotation of some previous reviewer, but there's a very important point: real life tragedies are not necessarily plausible in a book (like breathtaking real life adventures can be totally boring in a novel). I do my best, but I can't shake off the impression, that the author, losing his own sweetheart years and years ago, remembers her as some kind of idol, hence this ideal love, Leo and Eleni. But, sorry, this flawless love is incredible, uninteresting and sparks zero emotions in a flawed reader like me (I almost switched to Romeo and Juliet......) And when a young man is crying non-stop for the first 20 pages, you feel kind of drowned, wanting to breathe, not to read.

    It gets much better with the second storyline, as you can really make an idol of a girl, when you are at war, when you are suffering and separated from her by thousands of kilometers. And the description of Siberian reality in WWI times is credible, something, that does not happen very often to Western writers.

    Sadly, but Leo of 1992 is no character at all. I do my best to think what kind of person he is, I try to imagine this man living and breathing. Hmmm....... Puff of empty air. Ah, there's Roberto, much more alive... ditto Hannah. Weird things happen. It seems, that when the author puts too much of himself into the character, or maybe loves him too much, the reader gets a corpse instead of the protagonist.

    On the whole, it could have been two good love stories. Unfortunately, tying things together at the end adds a good amount of banality to everything. Maybe it's only my opinion, but I waited for this kind of ending since the moment I found out there are two storylines... and I would have been very pleasantly deceived by the author, had I found none of that. Alas... I could have written this ending myself, so why bother reading?...

    On the whole don't get me wrong, this book is worth at least a try. And after some 20 or 30 pages you won't be flooded by torrents of tears that often.



    1 out of 5 stars Total cheese-fest   July 3, 2008
    F. Chau (London United Kingdom)
    1 out of 2 found this review helpful

    This book is cliche, boring, badly written and strained.

    The "twist" is painfully obvious from about the thrid page.

    It's so corny it actually contains the words: "They told me I had TB, but I knew I was dying of a broken heart" - isn't that a line from The Simpsons?

    The love stories are utterly unbeleiveable.

    There's nothing redeeming at all about this book



    5 out of 5 stars A beautiful book   June 29, 2008
    Elizabeth (Bedfordshire)
    I am just echoing what previous people have said. Random acts is a truly beautiful debut novel and I was hooked from the first page. Definitely recommended!


    5 out of 5 stars Stick with it   June 23, 2008
    Ali (Newcastle upon Tyne)
    I loved this book. It laboured a little at times but stick with it and you will be well rewarded. OK a little quirky at times but so is the distraught Leo and even though the "surprise" is visible a mile off, the journey is wonderful. A lovely and unusual book.

    Qty 2 In Stock


    Merlin's Cave