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Carregando... Range of Ghostsde Elizabeth Bear
![]() Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. 2.5 stars I can't remember what I was going to say about this, but I was far from impressed. I was very intrigued by the sky that actually varies to match the dominant religion in the territory, but sadly less intrigued by the characters or plot. Quite good. I very much enjoyed the beginning set in the herder culture of the steppes. The skies changing according to regime still confuses me. The Scorpion Queen ending was boffo. It reminds me of the Lens of the World trilogy (MacAvoy). I'll have to re-read that and see if it still knocks me flat. Eternal Sky; 1
Temur's family are at war. His cousin and his brother have battled over who will get to be the next Khan. There is death all around him. Temur only survived the battle because he was so gravely wounded others probably thought him dead already and didn't waste energy killing a dead man. But he survived. Samarkar, the other main protagonist, is also from a royal family. She was once heir to the Rasan Empire, at least until a brother came along. Now she has renounced that role, and her fertility, and begun training as a wizard. But both their lands and people now face the same outside threat, there are rumours that the fabled Carrion King has returned to reclaim his empire. I really liked this book. It is good proper epic fantasy, with awesome world-building and a slow reveal of who the antagonist may be. It is not be set in the traditional "european medieval" fantasy 'verse, instead this is an Asian/Russian 'verse, Mongol inspired. Which of course made me think of the Jaran books(( which I love and adore. Go read them. Now! )) but it is a very different book than those. Much more fantasy then science fiction. But it investigates many of the same issues, gender roles and expectations, culture clashes, empire building and destruction, relationships. It also has a feature that I've come to really really appreciate whenever I come across it. Mature women. Not that there is anything wrong with young women and teenage girls, but it is so rare to find a woman over 30 with a prominent role in fantasy fiction. So it is great to see older women make their mark in books like this. Although, to be honest I'm not sure how old Samarkar is meant to be, she was married off and then returned to her family home, and is now a wizard, so I know she isn't a teenager, but maybe she isn't quite as old as I picture her. Maybe in her twenties rather than thirties? Range of Ghosts is a book that in some ways follows the usual fantasy fiction paths. A hero on a quest, helped out along the way by various wizards and warriors, traveling onwards in his attempt to claim his throne, facing peril both marital and magical. Temus certainly faces all that, but Bear uses the reader's familiarity with fantasy stereotypes and twists them enough to make them new and different. I really enjoyed this book. And it really helps that the characters are so solid and well drawn. I'll certainly be reading the next book in the series.
However, despite that scale, the book never loses its grounding in interpersonal interactions and the significance of a single life, united with other single lives. This novel plays with the rules of high fantasy and epic fantasy, sidestepping many classic and contemporary tropes with ease while constructing a fabulous second-world populated with powerful women, moments of kindness and stillness amidst the horror of war, and the personal made intensely political. Elizabeth Bear is one of the best writers in genre today. Period. She’s dipped her pen into more and more subgenres of Fantasy and Science Fiction and now, it seems, she seems intent on conquering epic fantasy. Given her abilities and strength of craft, if you have the slightest interest in epic fantasy, Range of Ghosts will push your buttons in all the right ways. It would take a tremendous set of other books from other authors for the rest of the year for Range of Ghosts not to make my 2012 Hugo ballot. Range of Ghosts is a highly enjoyable read, due mostly to how it effortlessly mingles old-school narrative structure with original worldbuilding. Its narrative foundation is the much-beloved quest-based epic fantasy...Elizabeth Bear builds upon that foundation with fantastic worldbuilding - instead of going with the standard pseudo-European setting, Bear borrows from Asian and Middle Eastern cultures ... Pertence à sérieThe Eternal Sky (1)
Going into exile after barely escaping a war waged by his cousin and brother, Temur, the grandson and heir of the Great Khan, teams up against an enemy cult with former princess Samarkar, who after a series of bitter betrayals has pursued a life of magical study. Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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![]() GênerosClassificação decimal de Dewey (CDD)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClassificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos E.U.A. (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:![]()
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The concept of the different skies (universes) when you move from one controlling empire to another was quite unique. (