Series: Book 3 in the Chalion series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-Alire, Lang:en
Summary
Starred Review. The absorbing third installment in
Bujold's epic fantasy series (after
The Curse of Chalion and the Hugo-winning
Paladin of Souls) links a disinherited swordsman
hero with a beguiling damsel accused of murdering a royal
prince in a land worshiping five gods, menaced by encroaching
neighbors and swarming with ancient magic and lethal
political intrigue. Lord Ingrey kin Wolfcliff, sent by the
kingdom's sealmaster to fetch orphaned Lady Ijada to trial,
soon learns they both unwillingly bear animal spirits
received in forbidden power rites stretching centuries back
into the primeval Weald. With the aged Hallow King now dying,
Ingrey and Ijada journey toward the king's hall at Easthome,
falling into a love that appears doomed, while Ingrey's
powerful fey cousin, Lord Wencel, spins a cunning web of
bloodthirsty ambition that binds them to him in an unholy
trinity. Though the book's complicated magical-religious
structure requires considerable suspension of disbelief,
Bujold brings to life a multitude of convincing secondary
characters, especially skaldic warrior-poet Prince Jokol and
his ice bear, Fafa. Bujold's ability to sustain a breathless
pace of action while preserving a heady sense of
verisimilitude in a world of malignant wonders makes this big
novel occasionally brilliant—and not a word too long.
Here Bujold returns to the world of
The Curse of Chalion (2001)_ _and
Paladin of Souls (2003) to show us intrigue and
mystery in yet another land. Lord Ingrey kin Wolfcliff has
been sent to the estate of Prince Bolesco, the half-mad son
of the king of the Weald. The prince has been murdered, and
Ingrey is to investigate. The accused is an orphaned young
noblewoman. But the prince had been dabbling in forbidden
sorcery, it seems, and the young woman lies under an ill-cast
spell. Despite his ostensible duty to the royal family,
Ingrey is drawn toward protecting the accused from those who
want to hang her as the quickest way of hushing things up, as
well as from the church, which might kill in an attempt to
cure her. Bujold's reworking of a classic romantic situation
is distinguished by its setting in a well-crafted world and
masterly creation of characters whose fates will keep readers
turning the pages.
Frieda Murray
From Publishers Weekly
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