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Blood of Ambrose

de James Enge

Outros autores: Veja a seção outros autores.

Séries: Morlock Ambrosius (1), Morlock the Maker (1)

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2055131,939 (3.5)2
Behind the king's life stands the menacing Protector, and beyond him lies the Protector's Shadow... Centuries after the death of Uthar the Great, the throne of the Ontilian Empire lies vacant. The late emperor's brother-in-law and murderer, Lord Urdhven, appoints himself Protector to his nephew, young King Lathmar VII and sets out to kill anyone who stands between himself and mastery of the empire, including (if he can manage it) the king himself and his ancient but still formidable ancestress, Ambrosia Viviana. When Ambrosia is accused of witchcraft and put to trial by combat, she is forced to play her trump card and call on her brother, Morlock Ambrosius--stateless person, master of all magical makers, deadly swordsman, and hopeless drunk. As ministers of the king, they carry on the battle, magical and mundane, against the Protector and his shadowy patron. But all their struggles will be wasted unless the young king finds the strength to rule in his own right and his own name.… (mais)
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Exibindo 5 de 5
Enjoyable read. Coming of age story in a fantastic world with interesting characters.

Loved the introduction. ( )
  quiBee | Jan 21, 2016 |
Blood of Ambrose is an enjoyable different sword-and-sorcery novel - a bit of a throwback in many ways. Enge has created an interesting cast of characters and a narrative with a nice pace to it.I'm looking forward to further entries in the series.

The King of Ambrose has always relied on help from the semi-mortal Ambrosius siblings - powerful wizards with a swarm of legends trailing them. Just as well, as the young King as been usurped, and he will need every ounce of creativity his "uncle" and "aunty" can bring to regain, and retain, his throne.

I enjoyed this novel. Enge is one of a growing number of fantasy writers writers, not outside genre per se, but certainly distinct from the prevailing trends. The antecedents of Blood of Ambrose are earlier fantasy novels. There's a kind of humour and Vance-ian touch to proceedings, and also a clear debt to Fritz Leiber.

As it happens, I love those older authors and their style of fantasy, so I felt right at home with Blood of Ambrose. This was Enge's first novel, and there are a few rough corners (the prose gets a little unfinished at times), but there's a solid base underneath it all.

That base is the characterisation. The Ambrose siblings, Morlock and Ambrosia, are well-drawn, interesting, and call back to a very rich history during the course of this book. Enge is happy to keep some cards off the table, and it makes for a complexity and ambiguity that really bodes well for the future books in the series.

Morlock in particular, is a tortured, and flawed figure who is always compelling. Enge resist silly hyperbole when it comes to these flaws - something a lot of fantasy writers succumb to, and it keeps the character fresh and his responses unpredictable.

A great start for a debut novel and first in a series. I'll definitely read more. ( )
  patrickgarson | Jul 12, 2014 |
The concept and characters of this book are far stronger than the writing and execution. Which is a pity, because the characters and concept are very, very promising.

The Empire is threatened twice - there's an internal threat, from the Protector who seeks to "protect" the country a little too well, arranging for the death of the Empress and stealing power from the very young King - as well as an external threat, from a mysterious "Shadow" that was bolstering the Protector. The first half of the book deals with the King's overthrow and the events that bring his immortal ancestors, Morlock and Ambrosia, into the city and to his aid. The second half deals with the discovery of the Shadow and his creepy necromantic acts, and his attempts to take over not just the Empire, but the world.

The world and its magical systems are fascinating - there's ties to Arthurian England, odd hints of immortality and spiritual magic, and all sorts of cool quasi-magical, quasi-mechanical creations wandering about. There's illusions, and alchemy, and smithery - phlogiston plays a major part in several areas, and dephlogistonating something seems to be an activity reserved for an excellent smith (or Maker) that also has psychic abilities. Fascinating concepts, all, and they're well applied against a backdrop of political machinations and coming-of-age.

The characters are unusual and engrossing, especially Ambrosia. She's an impossibly strong, dominant female character, the sort you don't see too often in fantasy literature. She's the progenetrix of an entire empire, and is still around to try to guide it and mould it to her will as the power behind the throne for generations; she's a powerful psychic and an incredibly deadly warrior, and is just plain badass. She's fearless, unsentimental, and vicious. It's striking to see this in a female character, because usually they're watered down with sentiment or sympathy SOMEWHERE along the line - not so Ambrosia. She has very little maternal instinct, and her drive is simply to gather power and protect the legacy she spent centuries building. She'll fight like a wolverine for her brother, but nothing else gets that sort of devotion - just cold, calculating logic and the fierceness of a hardened general. It's refreshing.

That said, the writing really lets down the side. There's way too many parenthetical asides, and there's a lot of details that simply don't compute. The young King has food tasters and constant bodyguards, for instance, and yet he mentions at one point being used to being cuffed, because the scullery boys used to beat him up. WHAT?! That doesn't even begin to make sense or flow in the context of this world or the author's own setup. There are simply too many contradictions and "oopsies" in terms of consistency and flow.

Which truly stinks, because I'd like to get to know more of this world and its characters - how Morlock and Ambrosia and Hope came to be who they are, and why Morlock really got kicked out of the Wardlands, and how this whole world came to be, with Merlin playing a large role in things and there being a clear link back to earth (this is NOT set on earth - there are three moons and a complicated timekeeping system based on their movement). I just don't think I can handle more of these internal inconsistencies and all the parenthetical asides. ( )
1 vote candlemark | Aug 12, 2011 |
Good first entry in a series. ( )
  Asata | Feb 14, 2011 |
Good lord but James Enge can write! This is by far the most impressive novel debut I have read for some time. ( )
  eoinpurcell | Aug 6, 2010 |
Exibindo 5 de 5
There's a kind of literately sensuous pleasure in Enge's writing—not so much sentence by sentence, of the sort found in Shakespeare, Mervyn Peake, and Raymond Chandler—to pick a wide range—but in his storytelling, including his writing per se, his sense of humor, his cleverness, and his power of invention.
adicionado por sdobie | editarStrange Horizons, William Mingin (Jul 31, 2009)
 

» Adicionar outros autores (1 possível)

Nome do autorFunçãoTipo de autorObra?Status
James Engeautor principaltodas as ediçõescalculado
Harman, DominicArtista da capaautor secundárioalgumas ediçõesconfirmado
Lukacs, ChuckIlustradorautor secundárioalgumas ediçõesconfirmado

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Blood of Ambrose

The glories of our blood and state
are shadows, not substantial things
There is no armor against fate;
Death lays his icy hands on kings.
-- James Shirley, Ajax and Ulysses
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To Lawrence J. Pfundstein Jr.

Laurentius, nonnumquam  laureatus, numquam nixus in laureas
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The King was screaming in the throne room when the Protector's Men arrived.
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Behind the king's life stands the menacing Protector, and beyond him lies the Protector's Shadow... Centuries after the death of Uthar the Great, the throne of the Ontilian Empire lies vacant. The late emperor's brother-in-law and murderer, Lord Urdhven, appoints himself Protector to his nephew, young King Lathmar VII and sets out to kill anyone who stands between himself and mastery of the empire, including (if he can manage it) the king himself and his ancient but still formidable ancestress, Ambrosia Viviana. When Ambrosia is accused of witchcraft and put to trial by combat, she is forced to play her trump card and call on her brother, Morlock Ambrosius--stateless person, master of all magical makers, deadly swordsman, and hopeless drunk. As ministers of the king, they carry on the battle, magical and mundane, against the Protector and his shadowy patron. But all their struggles will be wasted unless the young king finds the strength to rule in his own right and his own name.

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813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st Century

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