

Poisonmaster 01/10/2003 . Source: Donna Jones 
Overall then, I found the book very good. It really kept up the sense of mystery and that for me was a fantastic method of telling a story that has been told in very many
different ways, not all good. Buy from Amazon US - Buy from Amazon UK nb: US titles may only be available from Amazon US, and UK titles from Amazon UK. Buy Poisonmaster in the USA - or Buy Poisonmaster in the UK  It's a swamp filled, sorrowful place. It
harbours all sorts of people. People with a mind to deceive. People
with a mind to ally with those unworthy of alliance. People who
are striving for the truth of their existence.
It isn't their home world. It never has been although those that brought
them here will never tell them the truth of their arrival. Humanity has been stolen
to a place dark and unforgiving. The place is Latent Emanation.
You're
an alchemist, an apothecary. Bringer of scent and fragrance on a
damp and mouldy scented planet. Bringer of hallucination to entrance.
Hallucination for the Search for your kinds real history. Bringer
of possible death. You strive to earn from your work enough money
to pay to have your twin sister released from her Enbonding.
From the creatures that brought your people here in the first place,
the Lords of Night. You are unknowingly a distant relative of the
infamous Elizabethan mage, Dr John Dee. You are Alivet Dee and your
world has just been turned upside down.
Everything you thought you had is gone. All because of an Experience
Merchant and his customer who has died under the influence of a drug you gave.
Make a decision. The place is Latent Emanation. You are Alivet Dee and
your world has just been turned upside down. By it seems the Poison Master. Trust
him? Trust yourself first! Do you like a spiralling story that is a little
confusing to grasp what the hell is going on? If the answer is yes then 'The Poison
Master' is for you. From early on in the book, Liz Williams dangles
huge carrots but only for a fleeting instant. You get snippets of information
from the start of each part of the book, where insight into the life of Dr John
Dee in the sixteenth century seems to invisibly link up to the life of his descendant,
Alivet. Then there are the constant issues of who Alivet actually trusts.
This makes you question every event that takes place in Alivet's adventures and
thus inevitably makes for an instant page-turner. The characters are not that
colourful but really this is more of a story-driven book rather than a character-driven
one and it's quite a refreshing change. Ari Ghairen, the poison master himself,
is guarded and very restrained in his show of emotion but Williams has meant for
this to be in a world where Ghairen poisons and can be poisoned to achieve status.
The sub-characters of Iraguila Ust, the secretive and illusive Governess
of Ghairen's daughter, Elaniel of the higher spiritual human race who see the
likes of Alivet as animals and then the actual Lords of Night themselves. It makes
for a rich tapestry of deceit and treachery to have so many multi-layered agendas
all fighting to hinder Alivet. You never really know which line is the right one
and it's like the best mystery and fantasy all wrapped up in one. Even Ghairen's
daughter is an unknown quantity. Is she trying to kill you? Is she just a mixed
up little girl after her mother has died of poisoning? Who knows until right at
the very end. The backdrops of the different worlds that Alivet is
practically forced to visit are like the four elements themselves. Latent Emanation,
where she starts is wet and cold combining a swampy vista with a dark chilling
undercurrent. Hathes of Ghairen is cold and dry something on Alivet's arrival
seems very alien. Nethes of the sinister Ethaniel is hot and dry to the point
anything that dares step outside is burnt to a cinder. The home world as Alivet
thus surmises must be warm and wet. Three guesses where that home world might
be! The ending to the book was the only real let-down I had while reading.
It all seemed to be over far too quick and the Lords of Night seemed to not really
play that much of a part. Their demise is all over far too quickly and you sit
and wonder whether Williams kept those cards back from the book or whether they
just didn't figure in her telling of the tale. Maybe they didn't even exist. I
think that maybe my enjoyment of the book overall may have contributed to my lack
of enthusiasm for its ending, I might just have wanted it to never end! Overall
then, I found the book very good. It really kept up the sense of mystery and that
for me was a fantastic method of telling a story that has been told in very many
different ways, not all good. This rings true with the storytelling of Jack Vance
and she does acknowledge him at the beginning, part of her writing style has been
borne from reading his titles. Such a fine story mustn't go unnoticed.
The fact that she has managed to mix Earth's Sixteenth Century with that of a
distant planet in a distant time is quite wonderful. Williams certainly has a
fine array of twists and turns to keep you off the scent and for this she has
to be credited.
Donna Jones 
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