|
Northern Storm (The Aldabreshin Compass
book 2) by Juliet E. McKenna
pub: Orbit/Times Warner. 596 page paperback. Price:
£ 7.99 (UK), $10.99 (CAN). ISBN: 0-84149-167-5.
check out website: www.OrbitBooks.co.uk
The Southern Territories of Chazen, now governed by the disowned
Daish warlord Kheda, are desperately trying to recover their lands
and rebuild their lives after the attack of savages wielding magic.
Chazen Kheda now vows to rid the outlying islands of the small pockets
of savages that remain. In doing so, he finds a new and far more
terrifying threat awaiting him and his comrades. A huge impossible
beast, a fire dragon. Meanwhile, his ex-first wife of Daish is trying
to bring slander and cause mischief within his new household, making
trading for the new first wife of Chazen, Itrac, nigh impossible.
Even with the barbarian Dev, the mage that Kheda brought from the
North to defeat the savages, they have not much hope of surviving
this new threat. Dev has no experience with these infamous beasts
and he turns to an aid in the magelands of Hadrumal. Will the dragon
be defeated and more to the point have the actions of Chazen's new
warlord brought an unquenchable evil taint to the domain? Juliet
McKenna has done it again, but this time she's gone that one step
further in telling a fantasy epic to its fullest. We meet up with
some familiar faces from 'Southern Fire' in the malefic Dev and
the endearing Risala to whom Kheda has become totally smitten. McKenna
also introduces us to a few new faces.
One interesting character is the Azazir, the banished wizard from
Hadrumal, completely given over to his element and consumed by magic-lust.
We meet him after we have met up with Dev's magewoman associate,
another new character, Velindre. All the characters, much as the
first one, are well-rounded and altogether believable. The result
is, of course, a book that should definitely not be read as a standalone.
If you haven't read the first one then you won't have a clue what
is going on in this one because of the subtle references to previous
events.
McKenna's writing manages something rarely seen off the screens
of film and television and that's making a conversation more about
what isn't said more important than what is. In a particularly fraught
exchange between Kheda and his previous wife, the tension rises
to a fevered pitch as the two characters interact solely on the
unsaid notions held within their mannerisms and the double meanings
of their actual spoken words. The cover kind of hints that there
will be dragons in the book, but the story unfolds and reveals some
new angles with which to approach the whole mythology of these sometimes
over-used fantasy plot devices.
McKenna actually manages to make the experience of meeting a dragon
a new and invigorating one, introducing twists to the commonly used
traits we see in every other fantasy epic out there. I loved the
battle scenes between the dragons. They were exhilarating and thoroughly
entertaining to read. This is where McKenna's writing really takes
off. Her descriptive passages are lilting and move the story on
at the pace that it naturally seems to flow. Where description could
have been over-baked, this was a sumptuous feast of narrative delights.
This then is a worthy second outing for the characters of the 'Aldabreshin
Compass' sequence.
I unreservedly loved this book from cover to cover and I'm practically
drooling for the next instalment. There is only one question I would
have to ask though: Why haven't these books been brought out in
hardback editions? Such valuable and high writing quality deserves
the hardback incarnation.
Juliet McKenna has not only set a benchmark for fantasy writers;
she's planted herself a whole new mighty oak to carve her own damn
bench! .
Donna Jones
|