The Lady of the Flowers | |||||||||||
Sophie Masson | |||||||||||
Bantam Books, 350 pages | |||||||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
Why did I worry? Sophie Masson is more than capable enough to handle the situation. Opening the cover was like picking
up on an interrupted conversation with a dear friend. Masson has that kind of enveloping touch that draws the reader in
without pause, to a welcoming response, even a homecoming.
And so is Marie de France, heroine of The Lay Lines Trilogy. In the first book, she was widowed and
won the love of Richard the Lionhearted. All while fulfilling a promise made to her beloved, dying husband. That is
the kind of woman who is not going to hesitate when she is set an even more impossible task.
In The Lady of the Flowers, Marie must travel to far away Wales to release her knight Llew from an enchantment
that he may not survive.
Of course, this quest is going to be complicated by the "assistance" of a host of questionable characters -- some
are genuinely trying to help, others are there to keep her from succeeding. Springing from the Otherworld with magical
powers or stepping wholly human into her path, each being must be dealt with in the time that is rapidly running out. No
less than the fate of our world rests on Marie's delicate shoulders.
Not everyone (everything?) wants Marie to free her loyal knight. The cast of characters is no less fantastic than in
Masson's The Knight by the Pool. With Masson's deft touch, though, all manner of beings seem equally full and
realistic. Villains, goddesses, historical figures -- all appear plausible and possible. That only increases the tension
when the iniquity of their plans are revealed -- or trebles the relief when the purity behind their motives is glimpsed.
In such talented hands as Masson's, even the reality of magic and sorcery seems unquestionable. Each action flows so
naturally and smoothly from the last, there is no moment of skepticism or doubt, no break in the spell of fascination cast
by the book itself. In fact, it is difficult to put The Lady of the Flowers aside long enough to tend to the
banalities of real life.
Fascinating characters, mesmerizing magic, and a tantalizing plot -- what more could readers want? Whether they know it
or not, they want accuracy and detail, and few can compete with Masson in this arena. Her knowledge, the depth and breadth
and height her research can reach, is stunning.
Is there any downside to this book? Only that readers must wait until May 2000 for The King of Greenwood, the last
volume in this irresistible trilogy.
We can all bite our nails together. How's that?
In between reviews and interviews, Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. DARKERS, her latest novel, will be published in early 2000 by Hard Shell Word Factory. She has also written for BOOKPAGE and PUBLISHERS WEEKLY. Her articles and short stories are all over the map. You can check out Lisa and her work at her website hikeeba!. |
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