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SUMMER KING, WINTER FOOL

Ancient solar-king myths are combined with quasi-medieval monarchies in Goldstein's new fantasy (after Strange Devices of the Sun and Moon, 1993, etc.). The god Callabrion is supposed to ascend at midwinter, presage summer, and cause the days to lengthen. But, though midwinter has passed, Callabrion refuses to take his place in heaven: So the days grow still shorter and winter deepens. Gobro, the weak and ineffectual king of Etrara, is poisoned and supplanted by his sister Callia, just as the young nobleman Valdemar goes into exile. Val lodges with a beautiful librarian- -with whose help he discovers that he is the true heir to the throne of Etrara. Callia, meanwhile, declares war on neighboring Shai, but her armies are easily defeated—by treachery, force of arms, and magic. The Shai occupy Etrara, executing Callia and her retinue. Val must find allies where he can, and somehow Callabrion must be persuaded to ascend to heaven and bring summer. Insipid characters and feeble dramatics in a bland setting: not one of Goldstein's better outings.

Pub Date: May 1, 1994

ISBN: 0-312-85632-6

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Tor

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 1994

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THE QUEEN OF RAIDERS

From the Nine Realms series , Vol. 2

Perfectly fine despite second-book syndrome.

Cerúlia must grow up and learn to fight for her destiny in Kozloff’s (A Queen in Hiding, 2020) second Nine Realms novel.

Her mother, the Queen of Weirandale, is dead, and Cerúlia isn’t a child any more. She’s left her adoptive peasant family in order to escape evil Lord Matwyck’s clutches and eventually escapes Weirandale altogether. Using her ability to talk to animals and several bird-related aliases, Cerúlia manages to trek her way over the mountains and into the nation of Oromondo. Cerúlia knows that the Oros killed her mother, and she wants to avenge her death. She’s heard of a group of raiders who work to disrupt the Oros as they invade and pillage neighboring nations. When Cerúlia finally manages to find them and convince them to let her join up, she discovers not only new friends, but a newfound sense of purpose. But is any of that enough to win back her throne or even save herself from the Oro army? Interspersed with Cerúlia’s plotline are various threads centering on the Oro army and people, Lord Matwyck’s kindhearted son, and the raiders themselves. This is the second of a four-part series, and, as such, it falls into the expected pitfalls. The self-contained plot works, but it inevitably feels more like a buildup to further books in the series than its own story. It rises above filler, though, and Kozloff is clearly laying the groundwork for something good, particularly with the very last chapter.

Perfectly fine despite second-book syndrome.

Pub Date: Feb. 18, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-250-16856-6

Page Count: 512

Publisher: Tor

Review Posted Online: Jan. 12, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 2020

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THE MIME ORDER

From the Bone Season series , Vol. 2

Shannon’s prose style is serviceable, but her legion of fans will once again be here for the propulsive plot rather than...

Paige Mahoney, the Pale Dreamer of The Bone Season (2013), returns in this second volume of a projected seven-volume fantasy/science-fiction epic.

The novel begins with Paige’s escape to London as she eludes pursuers of all stripes and becomes public enemy No. 1. On the plus side, she’s with a gang of clairvoyants, and her cohort is headed by Jaxon Hall, one of the mime-lords of the title. (Mime-lords and mime-queens are leaders of clairvoyant gangs who form a subgroup within the various cohorts.) London becomes the main setting of the novel, and it assumes various guises, some comforting but most harrowing. Cohorts inhabit spaces that seem vaguely familiar (Covent Garden, Camden Town, Soho) yet remain mysterious and sinister. Readers of the first volume might also remember the emphasis on a specialized and arcane vocabulary applicable to the alternative universe the author creates. The glossary is again a welcome necessity. The prime mover of action here is Paige’s relentless pursuit by Scion, a governmental organization that sees her as a threat to its status and power. Eventually Paige meets up again with Arcturus Mesarthim, her Warden and a Rephaite—a physically immortal being. He has some advice for her—to be wary and to “manipulate [her] mime-lord…as he has spent his life manipulating others”—good advice for a world that is arcane, complex, multilayered and at times almost incomprehensible.

Shannon’s prose style is serviceable, but her legion of fans will once again be here for the propulsive plot rather than lyricism.

Pub Date: Jan. 27, 2015

ISBN: 978-1-62040-893-3

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Bloomsbury

Review Posted Online: Nov. 5, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2014

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