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More series reading from 2013, this time books that are in series that are, or may be, unfinished.



George R. R. Martin, A Song of Ice and Fire
A Feast for Crows
A Dance with Dragons

Elizabeth Moon, Paladin's Legacy series
Limits of Power

Kate Elliott, the Crossroads series
Shadow Gate
Traitor's Gate
(Technically, this is the end of a trilogy, but Elliott has a stand-alone novel and a second trilogy planned in the same universe which will continue the story.)

Michelle Sagara West, the Chronicles of Elantra
Cast in Peril

Katharine Kerr, the Nola O'Grady series
Water to Burn

Marie Brennan, the Onyx Court series
In Ashes Lie
A Star Shall Fall

Juliet Marillier, Sevenwaters series
Heir to Severwaters
Seer of Sevenwaters

Diane Duane, Young Wizards series
A Wizard of Mars

Jasper Fforde, Thursday Next series
The Woman Who Died A Lot

Liz Williams, Inspector Chen series
Iron Khan

Kevin Hearne, Iron Druid Chronicles
Hunted

Mercedes Lackey, Foundation series
Bastion

P. C. Hodgell, Kencyr series
Bound in Blood
Honor's Paradox

Deborah J. Ross, Darkover series
Children of Kings

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Liz Williams, The Shadow Pavilion

The continuing adventures of DI Chen and his ever-growing circle of partners-in-detection have reached new, if somewhat complicated heights.

Mhara, the beneficiary of one of Chen's previous investigations, is formally installed as Emperor of Heaven, and initiates changes which he hopes will bring Heaven and Earth closer together, reversing the course his Father had been set on. but not everyone in Heaven is happy with the idea of change - especially change that involves both greater freedom and greater responsibility for the citizens of Heaven, and Mhara finds himself the target of an assassination attempt. Chen is tasked to find - and foil - the demon assassin; meanwhile, his wife, the demon Inari, is drawn into the dimension "in between" where the assassin lives in the mysterious Shadow Pavilion.

Chen's partner, Inspector Zhu Irzh - a demon on long-term reassignment from Hell has been kidnapped in the course of a police investigation, and finds himself in the hunting lodge of the Indian god Agni, where he and Inari's badger/teakettle familiar are to be hunted by Agni's harem of tiger-demonesses.Is it a co-incidence that Zhu Irzh's fiancee is herself a tiger-demoness? Of course it isn't. Meanwhile, yet another tiger-demoness, summoned up years ago by a Bollywood screenwriter hoping to use her unearthly talents to make it big in the industry, is on the rampage throughout Singapore Three.

While I enjoyed the book, I felt it suffered somewhat by being a bit over-crowded. There were two full storylines here, and I'm not sure the either of them received the treatment they deserved. Particularly in the case of the assassination plotline, which failed, in my opinion, to fully explore a fascinating character, that of the two-spirited assassin Lord Lady Seijin, who is both male and female. I would also have liked to see more about the politics of Heaven. Also, the kidnapping plotline offered the potential to see much more of the Indian heavens and hells - we did see some of how this is set up, but that aspect of the material seemed a bit rushed.

In short, this could, I think, have been two separate novels, which might have made for even more enjoyment, and a more complete experience of both storylines.

This, however, will not stop me from reading the next installment, The Iron Khan - assuming I can get my hands on a copy. Williams has had to switch publishers three times so far in the course of this series, and so far it seems to only be available in hardcover or as an ebook. I have been waiting for a trade or mass market paperbook, but I suspect I will soon have to just go for the ebook.

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It's a grab bag of volumes from some of my favourite fantasy series! Well, in a couple of cases, loosely associated with my favourite fantasy series.


Mercedes Lackey, Intrigues
Mercedes Lackey, Changes

Volumes two and three of The Collegium Chronicles. In some ways, this series is very much like Lackey's very first Velgarth series, in which Valdemar and the Heralds were introduced through the eyes of Talia, an abused child whisked away from a life of misery to become a person of importance and destiny. But the particulars are different and the time is different and it's still great fun.


Mercedes Lackey, Sleeping Beauty

The latest in Lackey's Five Hundred Kingdoms series. I actually think this series is among the most interesting work that Lackey has done. These are all engaging stories in their own right, but at the same time Lackey is both analysing and deconstructing traditional folk and fairy tale motifs, and rewriting those tales with a feminist perspective. I like.


Katharine Kerr, The Silver Mage

The last volume of Kerr's epic Deverry cycle. Truly epic in scope, what makes this series unique is that, it's not just about the heroics and politics of a rich and diverse fantasy world and the interplay of characters and nations, it's also a story of spiritual redemption across time for the key characters, who are reborn again and again until the actions that wove their spirits together are finally resolved, and in a sense for the nation of Deverry, for in this last volume we discover the events that set the movements of nations through the series, across hundreds of years. An excellent ending for one of the great fantasy series.


Tamora Pierce, Wild Magic

First volume of The Immortals series. Set in Pierce's Tortal universe, this new series shares some characters - at least so far - with her first series, Song of the Lioness (aka the Alanna Adventures). What I've liked about Pierce's work from the beginning is that these are YA novels in which young women get to do great and heroic things.


Kristen Britain, Blackveil

Fourth volume of the Green Rider series. This volume took the series to some very dark places - both in the Blackveil forest and in the kingdom of Sacoridia. Along with epic deeds, we also find deceit, betrayal of trust and corruption on a number of levels and in some disappointing places. But things have to get darker before dawn, don't they?


Michelle Sagara West, Cast in Fury

The fourth volume of the Chronicles of Elantra series (aka the "Cast" series). As this series has progressed, the protagonist Kaylin Nera, a member of the Hawks - the police force of the city of Elantra - has been drawn into situations that have given her entry and a unique understanding of the various races that live, more or less peaceably, in the City. In this volume, she must deal with some of the consequences of her last major mission, which involved the telepathic Tha'alani, while engaging in a personal quest to clear the name of her friend and superior officer, a Leontine accused of murder. And we are carried a bit further along in learning more about Kaylin's own past and powers and what is happening in the region known as Nightshade, where Kaylin once lived.


Jack Whyte, Order in Chaos

Final volume in the Templar Trilogy. Whyte completes the story of his alternate history secret order concealed within the historically secretive Order of Knights Templar with the destruction of the Templars. As with most Templar fantasies, the remnants of the order ( and the secret inner circle) flee to England and Scotland where their legacy lives on - an element of the Templar mythos that probably has its genesis in the fact that the Templars were not persecuted nearly as violently in England as they were in continental Europe, so that while the order itself was disbanded, many former Templars lived on in England and a number of survivors from Europe made their way across the Channel to begin new lives.


Liz Williams, Precious Dragon

Third volume in the series. The continuing adventures of Detective Inspector Chan and his demon partner Seneschal Zhu Irzh in Hell, Heaven, Singapore Three on Earth, and a few other assorted dimensions. Complete with dragons and the Emperor of Heaven.


Kage Baker, Nell Gwynne’s Scarlet Spy

This is more of a related stand-alone to Baker's Company series, but I thought I'd include it here anyway. Steampunk adventures of the Ladies' Auxiliary of the Gentlemen's Speculative Society, featuring Lady Beatrice. The two novellas collected here are all we shall ever see of Lady Beatrice, as they were written not long before the untimely death of Kage Baker - but at least we have these.

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The Demon and the City, Liz Williams

The second of Williams’s Detective Investigator Chen mysteries, The Demon and the City, was as usual an intriguing and well-written story, but unfortunately, rather light on Detective Inspector Chen, who does not appear until about half-way through the book. The bulk of the preliminary investigation falls to his newly assigned demon associate Zhu Irzh, whom we met in the first book – and while I do enjoy the character, I’m more interested in Chen, and in the interplay between the two, than I am in the former vice cop from Hell. However, when Chen does appear on the scene – and even more so when his former patron deity Kwan Yin arrives to help them save Heaven and Earth – the full flavour of the first novel is back.

The first novel gave us a quite thorough tour of Hell – this novel shows us much more about Heaven in this unique fantasy based on Chinese religious traditions, and furthermore gives us some hints about how the different religious traditions in this fantasy near-future Earth interact.

It’s a tale of a complex plot involving a Chinese goddess, the patron saint of dowsers and fung shui practitioners who is dissatisfied with her Celestial position, Jhai Tserai, an Indian deva or spirit masquerading as human, who is the head of the very powerful Paugeng corporation, and a large cast of humans, demons, Celestial beings and assorted other creatures.

The story opens with the gruesome death of wealthy heiress Deveth Sardai, whose mutilated corpse disappears from the morgue almost before a bored and sexually frustrated Seneschal Zhu Irzh can begin his investigations. Deveth, it turns out, is the former lover of Robin Yuan, a lab employee at Paugeng whose current assignment is to monitor what she thinks of as “the experiment” – an otherworldly being, believed to be some kind of demon or other Hellspawn, who is being subjected to experimentation and modification under the direct orders of Jhai Tserai.

Williams has more than just action going on here, of course. There are some very interesting perspectives on the nature of good and evil as the story progresses and we see characters from Heaven, Hell and Earth acting and interacting in unexpected ways.

In short, a rollicking good read with some philosophical underpinnings, but I do hope there’s more of Detective Chen as well as Seneschal Irzh in the next volume of the series.

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Snake Agent, Liz Williams.

There are a lot of supernatural detectives going around these days. On TV, and in print, vampires, witches, warlocks, necromancers, werewolves and all sorts of slightly unusual folks are going about solving crimes of a paranormal nature.

I’ll confess to being a fan of the genre, beginning with some of its earlier incarnations – TV’s Forever Knight and the original Kolchak: The Night Stalker (Darrin McGavin is Kolchak, accept no substitutes), the Victory Nelson mysteries by Tanya Huff, the Diana Tregarde investigations by Mercedes Lackey, and so on.

One thing that’s been common to most of these magical mystery tours, however, has been their shared European heritage and Western setting.

Now Liz Williams gives us another take on the paranormal procedural. Set in Singapore Three (in the near future, cities themselves are commercial franchises), in an alternate fantasy earth that’s somewhat ahead of our own technologically, but where gods and demos are real, Snake Agent is the first in a series of novels (three so far) about Inspector Wei Chen, a detective on the Singapore Three police force who has the patronage of Kuan Yin and the magical knowledge and skills required to cross over into Hell if need be to track down a witness, or a criminal. Chen has a few other advantages in dealing with demons, including the fact that he’s married to one. As this is the first novel in the series, we also meet characters who are clearly going to be a part of Inspector Chen’s further adventures, including his opposite number from the investigative forces of Hell, Seneschal Zhu Irzh.

In a genre that can become a little too repetitive (just how many vampire detectives can one handle, anyway?), this novel strikes a new and interesting chord with its use of Chinese supernatural traditions and settings. The book is somewhat light in tone, and brilliantly skewers a number of recognisable personality types and aspects of the human condition, from devout ideologues to self-absorbed bureaucrats, while never losing the forward momentum required of a detective novel.

I’m certainly hooked.

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The Poison Master, Liz Williams

Doctor John Dee is a 16th century English alchemist, astrologer, and mathematician who becomes enchanted with the ideas of flight and of other worlds, and the possibilities of travelling between them to escape a growing climate of religious fanaticism. Seeking knowledge of what lies beyond this world leads to a meeting with a being unlike anything he has even known, and an offer of an unknowable future for him and those who, like him, fear the climate of hatred surrounding them.

Alivet Dee is an alchemical apothecary living in the city of Levanah on the planet of Latent Emanation, creating medicines, perfumes, drugs, and hallucinogens for her clients; she is also a Searcher, one of those who experiment with drug-induced altered states of consciousness in an attempt to recover the knowledge of how humans came to Latent Emanation and how they came to be ruled by the mysterious and terrifying Lords of Night. Wrongfully accused of the murder of a client, Alivet is drawn into an uneasy alliance with Poison Master Arieth Gharien, of the planet Hathes, who offers her the chance to bring down the Lords of Night by blending her knowledge of plants and their spirits with his own mastery of Poisons.

In doing so, she will close the circle, learn the answers to the Search, and bring to fruition the quest begun centuries earlier by Dr. Dee.

This book had my interest right from the start. Alivet Dee is a strong protagonist, and Williams’s blending of alchemy, Kabbalah, and shamanistic traditions of psychotropic drugs and dream journeys, and the poison garden of Rappacini’s daughter provides a fascinating context for what could otherwise have been a fairly commonplace tale of revolt against alien overlords.

This is the second of Williams' novels that I have read, and I have nothing but praise for the depth and originality of her work.

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And now for Part 2 of the omnibus thumbnail reviews of recently-read sff.


The Temple and the Crown - Katherine Kurtz & Deborah Turner Harris

Kurtz and Harris write wonderful alternate history occult fantasies, drawing to some degree on Templar mythology with (in the Adept series) a large splash of Blavatsky et al. The is actually the second of two alternate history books they’ve written in which survivors of the discredited Templar Order place their abilities in battle, both mundane and arcane, at the service of Robert the Bruce in his struggle to free Scotland. I’ve not read the first book, but this one was lots of good fun, assuming you enjoy reading about Templar occultists fighting for the Scottish throne against the villainous Sassenach.


Swordspoint - Ellen Kushner

I am kicking myself for only now having read my first book by Ellen Kushner. Swordfights, politics, intrigues, long-lost heirs to ancient noble houses, and wonderfully gay heroes – good reading and wildly entertaining.


Crossroads - Mercedes Lackey
The Valdemar Companion
Sanctuary

I have discussed my weakness for Mercedes Lackey’s books in other entries. Crossroads is another Valdemar anthology, and includes stories written by a number of authors including Judith Tarr, Tanya Huff and Lackey herself. Much fun. The Valdemar Companion is of course a reference work for those whose memories can’t keep track of all of the characters of all of the Velgarth stories, but it also has some fun articles and new material written by Lackey herself. Definitely for fen.

Sanctuary is the third book in Lackey’s new series about dragon-riding pseudo-Egyptians, and it continues the series well. The evil magicians are now in control of both Upper and Lower Egypt, er, the lands of Tia and Alta, and the remaining dragon riders, er, Jousters, of both countries are hiding out in the desert protected by Bedouins, er, whatever she’s calling them instead. We’re all set up for the fourth and final book of the series, in which young Kiron, the dragon-boy with a Great Destiny, leads his valiant army of free dragon-riders to the rescue and restores truth, justice and goodness to the Two Lands. And I’ll just lap it up once it’s out in paperback. ;-)


A Wrinkle in Time - Madeleine L’Engle
A Wind in the Door
A Swiftly Tilting Planet

I confess, I had never read Madeleine L’Engle’s oft-recommended Time quartet until this year. Now I’ve read the first three books and have been properly charmed by her writing, which, while somewhat quaint and perhaps just a shade too overtly religious at times (much like C.S. Lewis’ Narnia books, which one loves, if one does, perhaps as much because of as in spite of these things), are indeed delightful. I fully intend to read at least the rest of the Murray-O’Keefe (Kairos) books, which continue the adventures of the family from Wrinkle in Time and I may try the Austin (Chronos) books as well, although since they are generally described as being more realistic than the Kairos books, I may not enjoy them as much.


The Dragon Prince Trilogy - Melanie Rawn
Dragon Prince
The Star Scroll

I read Rawn’s two interlocking trilogies, The Dragon Prince and Dragon Star, when they were first written back in the late 80s and early 90s, so these two books go in the list of re-reads. I deeply enjoyed both trilogies, at least in part because of the complicated and interwoven political manoeuvrings of both secular and esoteric power bases. Like many others, I regret that real-life difficulties have so far prevented her from completing her Exiles trilogy, and continue to hope that someday The Captal’s Tower will appear. In the meantime, I can always re-read the Dragon trilogies again.


Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince – J K Rowling

Well, I’m ready for the final book now. I surely hope that Rowling has a finale that’s big enough and strong enough to carry the weight of all these years of building expectations. But whatever happens to Harry, Snape has to be one of the great literary love to hate, hate to love characters.


The Last Enchantment - Mary Stewart
The Wicked Day

More re-reads! I was going to wait until I had the full set in hand again, but there I was one afternoon, really craving some good old Arthurian historical fantasy, and there the two books were, and I said to myself, “I know what’s in The Crystal Cave and The Hollow Hills, I can re-read them separately once I pick them up.” So I read what I had to hand, and it was indeed fun to relive some of the earlier books of the popular Arthurian lit explosion of the 20th century.


The King’s Peace - Jo Walton

This is the first volume of Walton’s alternate history based on the Arthurian legend, and it looks to be the beginning of a worthy addition to the genre. I am, of course, delighted with the fact that the tale is set in a world where there is a good deal of gender equity and that the POV character (who appears to be fulfilling the Lancelot/Bedwyr function, at least so far) is a woman. A good historical fantasy read in general, and a treat for fans of the Arthurian material.


Empire of Bones - Liz Williams

Another new author (to me, anyway) and another novel I enjoyed very much. An original take on the classic star-seeding idea, with a well-realised alien culture, a non-Anglo protagonist and earth-based setting, and (minor but enjoyable to me) an honest look at issues of teleporter technology. I also liked the fact that the story line dealt with issues of disability and medical care. Worth reading.


Consider Her Ways and Others - John Wyndham

Another of my classic re-reads. Some thought-provoking stories, including the dystopic title story. I’ve always had problems with “Consider her Ways,” and the years haven’t changed that. The analysis of the role of romantic love in the social control of women remains solid after all these years, but Wyndham’s insectoid vision of sexless worker drones and brainless mothers in an all-female future makes for a terrifying alternative. I don’t believe that Wyndham lacked the ability to imagine a third alternative, so I must assume that this is some kind of cautionary tale to feminists, to be careful not to (in a deliberately maternalist image) throw out the baby with the bathwater.

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