| The Curse of Chalion | ||||||||
| Lois McMaster Bujold | ||||||||
| HarperCollins Eos, 448 pages | ||||||||
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A review by Lisa DuMond
The first thing to strike the reader about Bujold's work is the warm, welcoming feeling to her narrative. From the
first word, she invites you into another world and holds you safely there. This time, the setting is Chalion, a
diverse and arresting area of many domains, more potential rulers, and endless machinations. It is a time of
chivalrous suffering and cowardly betrayal on a backdrop of courtly manners and wills of iron. Perhaps very foreign to our
own existence, but instantly recognizable.
Lord dy Cazaril is home, at last, after surviving the very worst that the wars could mete out. He returns a betrayed
man, unsure of his welcome and asking only survival. The loyalty of the friends he fought beside and patrons he served
ensure that he will be far better received than that. But, the enemies within the aristocracy that schemed against him
during the war have no intention of allowing him to relax and enjoy his homecoming.
The greatest danger, in a time when power is thicker than blood, is to be too near the line of succession. When
Cazaril is given charge of Iselle, a strong-willed young woman only a few minor accidents away from the throne, his
own existence becomes even more precarious as he must fight not only her enemies, but a deadly curse that follows her bloodline.
As one would expect of Bujold, she has created lively, animated characters that move through her strong plot with
hard-headed minds of their own. From stable boy to mad consort, the cast rings with life, determination, and constant
surprises. Cazaril stands up as a slightly tattered hero for a time that needs its brave soldiers and fearless maidens.
His story is a challenge of human weaknesses against the almost overwhelming demands of right -- a battle his
world dare not lose.
From the light-speed of her space vessels to the mysterious powers of her array of gods and their mixed-blessings,
Bujold can handle the demands of her wide-ranging universes with the lightest, surest touch. It's no amount of
publicity or push of undeserved popularity that keeps her name appearing year after year on the Hugo and the Nebula
ballots. Talent and the pure pleasure of her voice hold a spot for Bujold, right where she should be: among the
heights of the master storytellers.
In between reviews, articles, and interviews, Lisa DuMond writes science fiction and humour. DARKERS, her latest novel, was published in August 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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