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Ride The Wind, Choose The Fire: Clear Print Edition Paperback – January 10, 2021

4.2 out of 5 stars 48 ratings

Come on a whirlwind ride across time and place with one of the most recognizable figures of Western history - Joan of Arc.

We all know of her, but few know the details of her life. Travel back in time with The Maid, in a series of imaginary interviews conducted by the author. Join her journey from shepherdess to warrior woman, to her rise to sainthood. Enjoy Joan's own words, recorded through two arduous trials. Admire her courage and stoicism, her compassion for the enemy, her battle strategies and her horsemanship.

Under the duress of imprisonment and trial, she still maintained her sense of humor, to the point of making her accusers and judges laugh out loud. Five hundred years later, the Catholic Church that condemned her as a heretic, made her a Saint.

Come with Joan the Maid. Ride the Wind. Choose the Fire.

This is the clear print edition of Ride the Wind. Choose the Fire, with a 14pt font size for easier reading.

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Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B08SGWNK6T
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Independently published
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ January 10, 2021
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 324 pages
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 979-8590729470
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.23 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 0.81 x 9 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 out of 5 stars 48 ratings

About the author

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Veronica Schwarz
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I’ve always loved reading from the time I learnt around the age of four or five. I read myths, fairy tales, legends, and encyclopaedias as a child. I began devouring history books and historical fiction, science, science fiction, speculative fantasy, religion, classic novels, poetry, and philosophy.

The first story I wrote was published! In Woman’s Day in 1965. It was a story called “Black Lily” and was published in a special holiday fiction section along with stories by Agatha Christie, Pearl Buck, and an unknown author called Robin Green. (That was me.)

I left Australia not long after that, lived and travelled in many countries, and forgot about the writing. I never stopped reading though. When I returned to Australia, my friend Annette Canterbury (AKA Tulku Rose) asked me to co-author a series of books for teachers and children. We wrote the books, William Brooks published them, and I had caught the bug.

Since then, I've published non-fiction articles on travel, history, mythology, language, politics, religion and philosophy, a children’s picture book and a self-help manual on learning.

Because I was unhappy with the magazines for women, I founded, edited and published an alternative magazine for women entitled The Dawn after Louisa Lawson’s original nineteenth century newspaper for women.

In 2010, my book on Joan of Arc was published. I wrote it as a series of imaginary interviews with Joan herself. The book, Ride the Wind. Choose the Fire, is based on fact and took some fifteen years of research and several trips to France.

Next, I put together a book of inspiring quotes, one for each day of the year, illustrating it with my own photographs and paintings. I called it The Gift of Pearls.

My most recently published book, Busting the Myths of Mars and Venus, blasts the lid off the constraints of gender roles and stereotypes and the damage they do to people and the planet. It also offers strategies for changing the lives of women and men, girls and boys, for the better. Told with anecdotes and humor, highlighted with my own illustrations and supported by ten years of research in fields ranging from anthropology to sociology, history to literature, folklore to psychology, medicine and neuroscience, myth and religion – and pretty much everything in between. It's the first in a series. This book offers you, the reader, an unforgettable experience and could change your life. Once you see, you can never unsee.

I am currently working on a second book in the Gift of Pearls series. This one is about writers and writing. Also in the pipeline is a Memoir and a second book in the Down to Earth series, Busting the Myth of Merit: Why Merit Doesn’t Work for Women.

You’ll find more about me and my writing here. https://www.veronicaschwarz.com/writer

Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
48 global ratings

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5 customers mention "Enjoyment"5 positive0 negative

Customers find the book enjoyable to read.

"This is one of those wonderful books you continue to ruminate over days after you’ve finished reading it...." Read more

"...take on the life of Joan of Arc told in interview format.. Enjoyable read . Author did a nice presentation." Read more

"...She really captures Joan's personality. It's an excellent book and I highly recommend it." Read more

"Very good and an easy history lesson. I learned so much. Easy and very enjoyable read. It was a book that I had trouble putting down." Read more

3 customers mention "Interest"3 positive0 negative

Customers find the book fascinating, with one mentioning they enjoy the insights it provides.

"Interesting take on the life of Joan of Arc told in interview format.. Enjoyable read . Author did a nice presentation." Read more

"...It's great and fascinating. I really enjoy the insights the book offers and the way in which the author gets into Joan's head...." Read more

"...The third group of authors provide the most useful and interesting accounts of this fascinating person...." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on June 24, 2019
    This is one of those wonderful books you continue to ruminate over days after you’ve finished reading it. I was deeply touched by the unique and personal approach of “hearing” from the subject in a conversational manner at many different points of her journey in multiple towns. The players in this drama were masterfully presented and the complexities made simple for all to comprehend. Couldn’t help but feel a correlation to the way I felt watching the Overlander series on Netflix and Starz and the insights of time travel and intrigue of political back door wranglings of men in power especially during war battles.

    The theme of an intelligent, powerful and passionate woman dismissed and abused obviously runs through many eras. Perhaps like many I only had a fleeting awareness of Joan but now I feel deeply a kinship and admiration. It’s not often a book awakens me in such an intellectual and emotional manner so I am grateful for this well-researched account of an important figure of the past who has so much to teach the present. Well done and priceless.
    2 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2020
    Interesting take on the life of Joan of Arc told in interview format.. Enjoyable read . Author did a nice presentation.
    One person found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2013
    I really love this book. It's great and fascinating. I really enjoy the insights the book offers and the way in which the author gets into Joan's head. She really captures Joan's personality. It's an excellent book and I highly recommend it.
    2 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2020
    I've read a great number of books about St Joan of Arc. I find there are three basic approaches to relating her story. 1) Authors who coop her story and bend it around a bit to justify some more current event, belief or point of view. 2) Those who seek to provide a "rational" explanation for Joan such as mass hysteria, mental defect, disease or disorder. 3) Finally, there are those who are quite comfortable being in awe of her deeds and history of her short career on Earth. The third group of authors provide the most useful and interesting accounts of this fascinating person. Happily, this book does fall into the third category. At the same time the author provides a unique device in terms of the vehicle used to deliver Joan's story by interviewing Joan while touring assorted important sites relevant to her life. IF you love Joan, I think you will enjoy this book.
  • Reviewed in the United States on August 6, 2019
    Very good and an easy history lesson. I learned so much. Easy and very enjoyable read. It was a book that I had trouble putting down.
    2 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on June 24, 2013
    Schwarz has a very good idea but does not execute it very well. The idea is to interview the Maid at various locales important in her 1429-31 public life. And Schwarz does a great job in describing those places as they are today.

    Where she fails is in capturing Jeane's character. The Maid comes across as brave but a bit silly. Her deep faith does not come through as it should, Also Jeane vis not interview Jeane about being on trial because she feels it would be to painful. This insults the Maid. Now in Heaven, what could hurt her?

    The last words in the book are "I'll never forget you." Schwarz says them to Jeane. While no doubt true, they trite beyond belief and offer no insight to this fascinating and inspiring figure.
    3 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2019
    Ride the Wind, Choose the Fire is an experimental novel, written in the form of a series of conversations between the author and the disincarnate Joan; a novel that seeks to help keep Joan of Arc’s memory alive, ‘a salute and a celebration’ of her astonishing courage and her short and intensely lived life. Schwarz provides a unique and engaging presentation that is at once philosophical, reflective, accessible and anything but boring. Here could be an educational book for the classroom - I would place it in Year 8 History in the UK curriculum - and yet the whole world can learn from a work such as this.

    At the age of thirteen, Joan, who was not in the least bit a mystic, heard voices issuing instructions, instructions she felt compelled to follow to help Dauphin Charles VII become crowned King of France. It became her mission and she set off against all the odds, a pretty young woman pitting herself against the powerful of the day. Joan of Arc is an important historical figure, demonstrating the immense bravery of women and how they were disregarded and mistreated by the church and the state.

    The narrative is helped along by Schwarz, who situates herself in France as she visits the various locations of Joan’s short life - from Domremy, through Vaucoleurs, Chinon and Poitiers to Orléan, seeing them as they are now, visioning how they were in Joan’s day. After a brief discussion of the background of the hundred years war between England and France, the story unfolds and is enriched with details of the customs and clothing of the time.

    This valuable imaginative re-telling brings to life the thoughts and feelings of Joan of Arc, her family life, her supporters and enemies, her decisions, and delves into the struggles, the build up to the battle at Orléan, the subsequent unjust trial and hideous death. Then, the posthumous redemption. Ride the Wind, Choose the Fire is very well researched and deserves to be held by all high school libraries.
    3 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • Andrea Acosta Serna
    5.0 out of 5 stars Felt like I met Joan.
    Reviewed in Mexico on March 9, 2024
    Amazing book, just what I was looking for.
  • E. M. Wickett
    5.0 out of 5 stars A Worthy Tribute to Joan of Arc
    Reviewed in Australia on December 30, 2024
    This is a weĺl-researched account of the simple, uneventful life of a loyal and courageous peasant teenager who had a divine calling to partially wage war against the English, to install and crown a Dauphin as King of France. Despite unstinting obedience to the Heavenly voices who guided her in this mission, despite her courage and sacrifices, she was betrayed by her King and by her own church, the Catholic Church. For her, they meted out an unreasonable and most cruel death - her body consumed by flames with a public burning at the stake. This book is a fitting tribute to her indomitable spirit!
  • Claire Louisa
    4.0 out of 5 stars Loved this concept
    Reviewed in Australia on December 29, 2024
    I started reading this and then bought the audiobook.

    I loved the concept of interviewing Joan of Arc, this was done so well that I truly believed that the interviewer was indeed talking to Joan. I can't say I knew a great deal about Joan of Arc, I remember seeing one movie many years ago but that is my extent of knowledge. she was indeed a brave young girl and though I don't believe, I felt her belief in the voices and her Lord.

    She wasn't treated at all well by many on the French side but the treatment by the English was abhorrent and I struggled to hear her story when we got to when she was captured. A brave and Nobel young girl who didn't deserve the end she got. The narrator was great and captured both voices really well.
  • Bernie Barnwell
    4.0 out of 5 stars Unusual book for me.
    Reviewed in Australia on July 21, 2019
    I had problems reading the concept of the writer speaking with someone who'd been dead for over 600 years, once over that, I found it quite interesting. Many names popped up I was familiar with, i.e. Duke of Bedford. The main one because I was born in Bedfordshire.
    I'm sure this author is destined for bigger things in the future.