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Guiding Stars
by Julius Ling
400 pages; quality trade paperback (softcover); catalogue #01-0079; ISBN 1-55212-680-3; US$31.00, C$35.95, EUR25.50, £18.00
This is a historical love story built on the hungarian revolution. The story plays out in 1956 Hungary, Australia, and Canada.
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About the book About the author Sample excerpt Catalogue info
About the BookIn GUIDING STARS, Julius Ling built his novel on a crucial period of history: what was life like in the nineteen forties and fifties in Hungary. While guiding us through the dark years of Communism behind the Iron Curtain, revealing the cruel Stalin era, he paints the oppression and peoples' patriotic feelings with flaming colors. But this is not a "Hungarian" story. In 1955, a delightful love story began to blossom between seventeen-year-old Katie Erdelyi and twenty-year-old Andrew Dombrady, but cruel events had torn them apart. Throughout the life of Andrew Dombrady (the main character, a freedom-fighter hero), Julius Ling paints the 1956 Hungarian revolution in vivid and unforgettable color. He brings to the forefront the heroic struggle, the human drama and the shocking lesson for a seemingly impossible dream‹freedom, sharing with us the few days of unforgettable but bittersweet victory, of which the betraying counterattack followed. The Soviet revenge was horrendous. Budapest was in flames, the country in chaos. People's dream were shattered, then the Soviets began to round up the freedom-fighters to deport them to Siberia. In order to escape deportation, Andrew had to leave in a hurry- without having a chance to say good-bye to Katie, his beautiful love. They simply lost each other... From here the story leaves Budapest and takes Andrew to Canada, Katie to Australia. Feeling that finding each other again is probably hopeless, in their struggle for survival the question pops up from time to time: is it worthwhile going on living? Yet, despite the harsh years, the two lost souls keep searching for one another. This is one of the most moving and heartrending love stories ever written. Julius Ling spins the threads of the story between three continents with a skill of a magician. Chapter after chapter, adventures and shocking events follow one another. The book is so exciting that it glues the reader to the pages, making it impossible to put it down. The powerful conclusion puts the cap on this amazing Canadian story -it thoroughly wins the hearts of the readers. They feel that they're actually there with them, living and experiencing every moment of Andrew's and Katie's exciting story. Naturally the erotic scene is not missing- nor should it be missing-from a modern love story. But it is not just for playing with a fashionable subject; rather it is an integral part of their innermost human feelings. It is written from their souls with such a pure and powerful force that portraying true love in this manner-sad to say-is slowly fading out from our current literature. There is a moving passage in Hemingway's book: FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS, when two lovers find each other. In GUIDING STARS, there is no moving episode that would not match, or even surpass Hemingway's novel, either in power or poetic beauty.
Dear Mr. Ling,
Gyula Nyitrai
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About the AuthorThere is a resemblance between Julius Ling and Andrew Dombrady, the central character in GUIDING STARS. In 1956, Mr. Ling and his wife were Hungarian refugees, landing in Australia, knowing no more than "yes" and "no" in English. After starting at the bottom, Mr. Ling worked as a machine operator at the Commonwealth Bureau of Statistics in Canberra, where he learned some English. In 1966, he and his wife emigrated to Canada, and worked at Statistics Canada, in Ottawa. Mr. Ling is now retired and living in Victoria, British Columbia. This is his first novel in English. |
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Sample Excerpt
Everyone's life is an interesting story. As soon as we, the authors, are choosing someone's life for a book, it is like seeing a naked Christmas tree with its countless branches. Then our job is to find the right ornaments to create a beautiful tree. We have ideas, as millions of thoughts stirring in our minds that demands their places-the words are our ornaments.
When we are sitting behind the typewriter, we move into another world; our minds are going through a fast transition. Mentally we are living the lives of our characters. They are our brainchild; no wonder they deeply grow to our hearts. When I created Andrew Dombrady, Katie Erdelyi, and their families, although I had to study them, they were all real to me, and were my best friends. I could laugh and cry with them-sharing their thoughts, sadness and happiness. That is the only way to breath life into them!
We create life-and-death situations, conflicts and contradictions-actually playing God over their lives. Perhaps occasionally our own feelings and opinions are expressed, but the characters have stubborn minds of their own, and we don't always agree with them. Our endeavor is to make the story as real as possible. Writing is not without a great deal of struggle in choosing the right words. At times it seems an insurmountable task, yet, even when frustrated, an inner force will not not let us stop.
We feel their emotions-it is real. I loved Andy and Aniko passionately; they were like my substitute grandchildren. In my mind their lives go on, I think of them often... wondering. I miss them a lot.
For a book-regardless of the subject-to be good and worth reading, we know that it must be true to life, entertaining, tasteful and informative. When the readers are enjoying the fruit of our work, they will never know the long nights of struggle, the dozens of re-writes... and that is how it should be. (One of the highest rewards I receive from my readers are comments like "It was so easy to read.")
When we feel that our "baby" is ready to be born, in spite of the pain of saying good-bye to it, there is a glorious, satisfying feeling.







