| Fire Logic | |||||||||
| Laurie Marks | |||||||||
| Tor Books, 373 pages | |||||||||
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A review by Michael M Jones
For Emil, a scholar-turned-military leader, the passing of the seasons represents yet another year spent fighting, suffering, and
giving his life to try and retake Shaftal. Meanwhile, the half-blooded metalsmith Karis continues to struggle with her growing
addiction to the drug called smoke, an addiction guaranteed to kill her whether she surrenders to its oblivion, or tries to
resist it. And for the last Ashawala'i, Zanja na'Tarwein, it seems as though her time on this world is at an end, as she's
captured, crippled, and tortured by the Sainnites that she's fought for so long. But when Karis, driven by visions, rescues and
heals Zanja, she links the courses of their lives. No matter how far they are from one another, it's a sure bet they'll come
back together before long. These three, and more, are drawn up in a drama bound to heal Shaftal and return it to its rightful
inhabitants, or destroy it once and for all.
Fire Logic is a fascinating beginning to a multi-book saga placing an emphasis on mysticism and emotion. The main characters
revolve around one another, linked by ties of friendship, obligation, love, and dependence, forming emotional bonds that all
but leap off the page. The unusually laissez-faire attitude the characters assign to gender and sexuality lend an alien air
to the setting, placing it apart from more traditional fantasies. While the plot occasionally gets bogged down in the
same mystic elements which make it interesting, especially in the detailed explorations of elemental magic and divinatory
glyphs, it still manages to keep moving towards the conclusion, which feels more like a respite between acts than it does
the end to a story. Of course, as the included preview of Earth Logic, the next book in the series, indicates, there's
still much left to be told in the saga of Karis, Zanja, Emil, and their loved ones. I'm certainly looking forward to seeing
how it comes together in the end.
Michael M Jones enjoys an addiction to books, for which he's glad there is no cure. He lives with his very patient wife (who doesn't complain about books taking over the house... much), eight cats, and a large plaster penguin that once tasted blood and enjoyed it. A prophecy states that when Michael finishes reading everything on his list, he'll finally die. He aims to be immortal. |
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