

The Briar King (The Kingdoms Of Thorn And Bone book one) by Greg Keyes 01/12/2003 . Source: Jennifer Howell 
pub: TOR. 553 page hardback. Price: £17.99 (UK). ISBN: 0-4050-3351-7. Buy from Amazon US - Buy from Amazon UK nb: US titles may only be available from Amazon US, and UK titles from Amazon UK. check
out website: www.tor.com
In the world according to Greg Keyes,
the evil, pretty much immortal Skasloi Lords once enslaved humanity.
Then Genia Dare, the Born Queen, led a rebellion that heralded a new
age of freedom and no more Skasloi.
Cut to two thousand years of peace later and the youngest of her descendants,
Princess Anne Dare of Crotheny, is having strange dreams and visions that warn
there must be a queen alive when he comes and that it may well be her.
Having
no clue as to who he is and with two older sisters and a mother
between her and the throne, Anne is not really inclined to take
the warnings to heart.
Meanwhile,
Aspar White, the king's holter, hears stories of supernatural massacres in his
forest and comes face to face with a mythical monster who may turn out to be the
warm-up act for something even worse. Along the way, Aspar rescues Stephen Darige,
a trainee priest-scholar whose talent with dead languages leads him to translate
an ancient document with an ominous message: the Briar King, harbinger of death,
is overdue to make a comeback. For anyone familiar with the fantasy
genre, merely reading the blurb of 'The Briar King' should be enough to induce
cliché overload. Ancient evil awakening, check! Prophesy, check! Idealistic
young priest, rebellious princess who has been 'chosen', grizzled, grumpy but
fair woodsman - check, check, check! Luckily for Greg Keyes, it only
takes about thirty seconds of reading to realise that this book deserves every
one of the many plaudits adorning the back cover. Keyes, as it happens, has a
way with language that had me pausing to admire every other phrase and 'The Briar
King' has a dense, layered plot that won't reduce down nicely to a comfortable
blurb. What makes it so different is that, on the surface, this is
a classic example of what passes for fantasy these days. Beneath the apparent
clichés lies a dark, spiky take on the usual with characters that may not
always be likeable but are always believable. The dialogue is an especial high
point. Take a look at the two soldiers in the prelude for a great example of how
to make even over-blown fantasy speeches sound natural. What this all
adds up to is a book that is more about its characters than about the world they
live in or the fantasy tropes around them. The settings, for instance, are nothing
groundbreaking but merely solidly recognisable Western cultures. Like all the
best fantasy, this is really about human nature. In a nice twist, the Briar
King, drawing from pagan mythology of the Green Man, is seen as something terrible
but not necessarily evil - more an inevitable part of nature. It takes human characters
to come up with the really sick and twisted schemes, as Princess Anne's dysfunctional
royal family soon find out. It is perhaps the darkness that lends this
book its weight. While never one to stint on the gore factor (I lost count of
how many disembowellings after a while), Keyes also has a deft touch in showing
injuries and death from the perspective of the victim. The confusion and
denial then comes across as far more realistic and powerful. The concept of a
'coven' of nuns actually devoted to teaching girls how to be assassins and spies
works as a good counterpoint to expectation and the slight twists on religion
are generally well thought out. As good as 'The Briar King' is, it
is essentially a difficult book to describe. As far as I'm concerned, it goes
beyond what I've come to expect from the genre and not in ways you can anticipate.
Special mention has to go the artist Kirk Caldwell as usually maps are on my list
of What I Hate Most About Fantasy. The inside covers of the hardback edition
are home to a couple of beautifully detailed water-colour maps that I actually
spent time poring over and that almost never happens. In the end, the best
recommendation I can give is that if you are sick to death of fantasy, read 'The
Briar King'. Remember why you used to love it.
Jennifer Howell

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