Series: Book 1 in the Codex Alera series
Rating: ****
Tags: EN-Fantasy, Lang:en
Summary
At the start of Butcher's absorbing fantasy, the first in
a new series, the barbarians are at the gates of the land of
Alera, which has a distinct flavor of the Roman Empire (its
ruler is named Quintus Sextus and its soldiers are organized
in legions). Fortunately, Alera has magical defenses,
involving the furies or elementals of water, earth, air, fire
and metal, that protect against foes both internal and
external. Amara, a young female spy, and her companion,
Odiana, go into some of the land's remoter territories to
discover if military commander Atticus Quentin is a
traitor—another classic trope from ancient Rome. She
encounters a troubled young man, Tavi, who has hitherto been
concerned mostly with the vividly depicted predatory
"herdbanes" that threaten his sheep as well as with his
adolescent sexual urges (handled tastefully). Thinking that
Amara is an escaping slave, Tavi decides to help her and is
immediately sucked in over his head into a morass of
intrigues, military, magical and otherwise. Butcher (_Storm
Front_, etc.) does a thorough job of world building, to say
nothing of developing his action scenes with an abundance of
convincing detail. This page-turner bodes well for future
volumes.
This first book of a series, the Codex Aliera, is a real
page-turner, with the classic plot of a kingdom threatened by
both an outside invader and internal treachery enlivened by
an abundance of original details and sheer storytelling
gusto. For centuries, the ability of the people of Aliera to
bond with furies--elemental spirits of earth, air, fire,
water, and metal--has allowed them to defend their land
against invaders. But the current lord is old and lacks an
heir. So Aliera's traditional enemies plot with treacherous
lords within the country to seize power. Far off in the
mountains, the young lad Tavi struggles with his inability to
attract and bond with a fury--and with sensual adolescent
urges. He saves the life of a young girl he believes to be a
slave, but who is actually an agent of the king, looking for
traitors. Tavi is himself drawn into battle and war before he
can say "lost sheep." A promising series launcher.
Frieda Murray
From Publishers Weekly
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