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Title: Heir of Sea and Fire
Series: Riddlemaster #2
Author: Patricia McKillip
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: Fantasy
Pages: 215
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis: |
Raederle, the woman betrothed to Morgan, sets out to find him as he has gone missing. She hooks up with some others, one of them being Morgan’s younger sister and sails all over. Morgan has thoroughly disappeared though and the landheir power has been passed on to his brother. This usually means the original holder of said power is dead and almost everyone but Raederle believes Morgan to be dead.
Part way through Morgan is revealed to be alive and chasing after the Bard who betrayed him AND that the wizard Ohm has been masquerading as The One (the magical master of the whole land). Raederle must convince Morgan to not take his vengeance against the Bard as it will destroy who Morgan is.
Raederle also comes into powers of her own. She finds out that one of her ancestors was a shapeshifter from the sea and this blood has bestowed peculiar power to her. Considering that the shapeshifters were doing their best to kill Morgan in the previous book, Raederle isn’t sure how Morgan is going to act when he finds out his betrothed belongs to those who wanted him dead.
The book ends with a showdown between the dead of Hel, controlled by Raederle and the Bard and Morgan. Morgan is convinced to show mercy and then he and Raederle set out to track down Ohm and get some answers for all the mysteries going on.
My Thoughts: |
While I am giving this 4stars this time, I completely understand myself for giving it 2 stars back in ’07. This was trying to tell a fantasy story that needed a trilogy and McKillip kept going between fantasy writerstyle of the day and her own style of lyrical prose. It makes for an unsettling read as at one point you’ll have everything spelled out for you and then 10 pages later some monumental revelation is made as an aside in some oblique reference to some myth.
That was the weakness of this book and I am not sure that it can truly overcome that weakness. It’s the same problem I had with Riddlemaster of Hed and the main reason I wouldn’t recommend these as starter books for someone looking to get into McKillip.
Now that being said, since I have already read almost everything of McKillip’s and am currently re-reading everything, I can appreciate this book for its strengths.
This borrows heavily from Welsh/Welch (love that grapejuice by the way!) myth with the lands of Hel, Awn, etc and the unsettled dead and magic held by the lands rulers. If you’ve ever read The Prydain Chronicles by Llloyd Alexander, you’ll recognize a lot of the places and situations McKillip uses in this book. I think having that pre-existing knowledge will help a lot in understanding just what is going on, since there is so much happening without being spelled out. McKillip was writing for a well-read audience and I think a more modern audience will miss out on a lot of references, references that make this a much fuller, richer story.
Raederle was a great character. She wasn’t pie in the eye in love with Morgan, since she had only known him as a friend growing up. But since he was her betrothed, she was going to find out what happened to him. It showed a core of steel in her character. That showed her as strong but not some kickass heroine where her femininity was completely overshadowed by her being a man with breasts. She wasn’t a warrior, she couldn’t sail the ship she was on but there was NEVER any doubt that it was Raederle driving and leading everyone else on. When she confronts Morgon about his quest for vengeance, she doesn’t kick his legs out from under him and pin him down until he submits. She supports the parts of him that she does admire and lets him see that and lets that support decide him.
The supporting characters, from Morgon’s younger sister to the ghost of the King of Hel (that is him on the cover, lusting after his skull, which had been nailed to a midden pile and that Raederle used as a bargaining chip in obtaining his help) to Morgon himself were just as good.
To end, I once again thoroughly enjoyed another McKillip story while definitely not recommending this as a starting place for anyone thinking about a McKillip journey. Get some “experience” with her as an author and then come back to this.
★★★★☆
McKillip is almost always a safe bet. Much, much better than some of the fodder being published nowadays…
NB: This one I didn’t read. Thx for this. That’s the beauty of reading well-thought-out reviews. It gives me not just a glimpse into the book.
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The funny thing is, I as a reader simply couldn’t appreciate her until I was in my 30’s and later. If I’d read this in college, I would have hated it. It’s not concise and straight to the point and it has taken me maturing to a certain point to be able to appreciate that writing style.
But now, my goodness, I really do appreciate it 😀
My blogging philosophy is to write a review so that I don’t have to read the book again. That has obviously changed over the years but it’s what I’m aiming for now. And if it means other people don’t “need” to read the book after a review, so much the better 🙂
So little time, so many books!
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There’s much to be said about the fact we’re older and wiser…
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Sounds awesome! I remember enjoying McKillip when I was younger, but I find myself more hesitant with her works as an adult. I think a huge part of my reluctance is the reviews of people who don’t understand her style. I’ll be looking into simpler books of hers to start my own McKillip re-read, though.
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Yeah, I wouldn’t have understood her style 15 years ago, that is for sure 🙂
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Interesting… An author that grows on you as you get to know better their writing style and the way they build on some myths. I like the idea of having to… work for my reading fun 🙂
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McKillip really does make her readers work for it, but the payoff? My goodness, it just gets better the older I get and the more I read 😀
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I agree! I remember reading the Riddlemaster books in my early twenties and finding them confusing. It wasn’t until I read them again in my mid-thirties that I really appreciated McKillip’s writing. I am still discovering other books by her and loving everything I find.
Also, that cover art is B.E.A.utiful! 😀
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The cover is by Darrel Sweet I believe. He has a very distinctive style when it comes to characters 🙂
My only complaint about McKillip is how varied her output is. Sanderson has really set the bar high in terms of churning out quality stories consistently.
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‘Tis true. Sanderson shows up a lot of other writers. 🙂
*bumbling off to google Darrel Sweet*
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I think his middle initial was “K” if it matters. He did most of the Wheel of Time books as well.
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Aha! Thought his style appeared somewhat familiar – have just found out he did some Piers Anthony covers too!
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This sounds like a great book/series. Also I like the cover
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Considering that english is your second, or third, language, I’d find it really interesting to see what you make of her lyrical prose. Would it come across beautiful to you, or just confusing?
And yet another reason I like having international friends. It opens up my world to a whole other level of possibilities 😀
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First need to track down the books. I dont know too much of lyricals and that stuff
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basically, lyrical means poetry. Her writing is very poetical. If that helps.
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If i made it through hobbit and LOTR, i could do this too, i hope
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Yeah, the way you write poetry, it seems you are already there
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I like how versed you are in her writing style. There’s a lot of “understanding” going on.
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Her writing is definitely complex enough to stand up to, and thrive on, re-readings. It is making this whole re-read of her stuff very enjoyable 🙂
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