Series: Book 2 in the Tales of Alvin Maker series
Rating: **
Tags: EN-Fantasy, Lang:en
Summary
Card's fantasy series, "Tales of Alvin Maker," got off to
a delightful bang with Seventh Son, which introduced an
alternate early America where folk magics such as healing and
dowsing really work. A nation still inchoate, its independent
states are a crazy quilt, some rebellious while others remain
loyal to a variety of European countries, some repressive
while others grant native American Indians citizenship. This
second volume finds an exiled Napoleon in Detroit, dreaming
of empire and glory while Governor William Henry Harrison is
plotting his own future on the graves of red Americans.
Between these forces are the native followers of two
brothers, the warrior Ta-Kumsaw and the pacifist prophet of
the title, Tenskwa-Tawa. With its preachy tone, tepid
mysticism and forced coincidences, this sequel, though
interesting, doesn't live up to its predecessor. Card
recently won the Hugo Award two years in a row, the first
time a novel (Ender's Game) and its sequel (Speaker for the
Dead) have both taken top honors.
Young Alvin Miller's magical talent for making things
whole becomes the focus of a desperate race to prevent a
bloodthirsty war between the Indians and the white settlers
in North America. Set in an alternate world steeped in
natural magic, this sequel to Seventh Son continues to
demonstrate the author's love for American folklore.
Recommended. JC
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1987 Reed Business Information, Inc.From Library Journal
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.