• RI March 2024

    From Ted Nolan @21:1/5 to All on Tue May 7 01:50:38 2024
    Not a lot of books for March, but yet I am late anyway.
    As usual the links are Amazon affiliate ones which could in
    theory (but never yet in practice) earn me a pittance should
    you enter Amazon through one and buy something.

    =====

    Fortune's Blade
    by Karen Chance
    https://amzn.to/3PM3E0g

    Dhampir Dorry Basarab is something of a split personality, or more
    accurately like some of the old theological debates, she is two
    persons in one body. Due to the odd circumstances of her birth,
    and the untutored efforts of her vampire father to save her life,
    the vampire aspect of her self was separated out as her own person,
    "Dorina", whom Dorry had just started to finally realize and acknowledge
    over the past few years.

    The status quo was fundamentally altered in the last book when a
    magical attack separated the two. Dorina has had the ability to
    spirit travel away from their shared body for a while, and when
    that spirit is kidnaped away to Fairie, where all spirits have
    bodies, she perforce finds herself in the odd predicament of being
    her own person 24/7, instead of just when Dory needs help. Luckily
    for her, Dory's vampire "Second", Ray was kidnaped with Dorina, and
    is one of those tough but underestimated characters Chance does so
    well.

    In this book, the pair finally make it to Fairie civilization after
    a dangerous trek across the wilds, and unexpectedly encounter master
    vampire Kit Marlowe, whose day is always ruined whenever he runs
    into Dory/Dorina. The trio finally have some shot at getting back
    to our universe except for the fact Marlowe hates Dorina, Ray hates
    Marlowe and Dorina faces arena battles, dragons and unexpected
    quests.

    In the meantime Dory has been frantically searching for her sister
    on her own hastily arranged expedition to Fairie somewhat supported
    by a chancy alliance with her best friend's dragon family (though
    less so than you might think) but gradually realizing what an
    impossible task she has taken up. Her chances of finding Dorina,
    or even surviving herself seem pretty slim, but it turns out that
    Dorina is not the type to fade into the background, and Dory is not
    the type to quit, ever, and the two stories finally intersect in a
    battle royale that may settle the fate of two universes. There are
    unexpected family reunions, unwanted gods, the Pythia and even "But
    I saw you die" Marlowe may find a moment of happiness, if any of
    them survive..

    I got a little burned out on Chance's "Pritkin Quest" arc, but she
    is in fine form here, doing the type of
    characters-we-care-about-under-stress work that she is very good
    at.

    Magic's Mantle (Ard's Oath Book 1)
    by Bruce Sentar
    https://amzn.to/3J1MVlK

    Noble Bearings (Ard's Oath Book 2)
    by Bruce Sentar
    https://amzn.to/3vqXFqQ

    Arden (Ard to most everyone) has been living a quiet life in a small
    village at the edge of the kingdom. An orphan, whose adoptive
    parents died some years ago, he has been making his way as the hired
    help for the local innkeeper. It's not quite what he had hoped for
    in life, though he does well enough. He knows though that his birth
    father was a mage, and had hoped the power (which runs in families)
    might come to him, but he's past the age where that usually happens
    (he's a late 17 when the story opens), and it looks like he will
    live out his life in moderately comfortable obscurity. To make a
    mediocre situation one level moreso, his best friend & first love
    developed powerful "anchor" talents and has departed for the Capital
    city for training. She did so abruptly and without saying goodbye,
    something Ard still hasn't quite gotten over, despite advances from
    a merchant's daughter who would be an advantageous match.

    Then while aiding one of the "Corrupted" mages, despised by the
    kingdom's power centers, but tolerated here in the marches, evade
    a royal patrol, Ard undergoes an unexpected magical attack, and
    even more unexpectedly counters it. The Corrupted (who is more
    than he seems, and not a random visitor) lays out a few interesting
    facts for Ard and vanishes leaving Ard to return to the inn to find
    that the royal patrol is actually in town to find *him*, he now
    being the subject of a prophecy, and of course in said party is his
    first love ("of all the gin joints..").

    As it turns out Ard is the first "Four Sphere" mage in generations,
    he is a possibly very important personage, especially as the Kingdom
    is mired in a war which is not going well at all. However, there
    is also the unfortunate fact the current royal family came to power
    by killing all of the old Four Sphere mages, something Ard will
    have to keep in mind, as they surely will. Also complicating things
    is that a mage needs at least one anchor for each sphere he or she
    masters, and more often than not a mage/anchor relation involves
    sex, so Ard will have to build a harem (poor guy!) of anchors, and
    possibly other mages who bring something to the table. He's not
    against any of that, but he's also a bit of a romantic, so he's not
    going to jump into anything just for politics.

    These are fun books so far. Ard is somewhat of a naif, but not as
    dumb as he plays, and he makes some shrewd moves over the course
    of the action. The magic system is different enough to be interesting,
    and the side characters get good development. I did think the end
    of the second book was a bit weaker than it could have been. The
    somewhat evil First Princess made a point of teaching Ard the
    Spider-Man lesson earlier in that book, and when he got himself
    assigned to a rogue-mage and anti-piracy expedition to get himself
    away from her, I expected that when his party put down a nest of
    pirates, we would get vignettes of dead pirate camp followers and
    children to drive that lesson home, but in the event it all happened
    rather surgically. That expedition however did give us some hints
    at the "Big Picture" which is not quite what Ard's mage tutors have
    told him, and I'm on board for the next book.
    --
    columbiaclosings.com
    What's not in Columbia anymore..

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