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Through The Darkness (The Darkness Series Book 3) by Harry Turtledove

Pub: Earthlight/Simon and Schuster. 514 page paperback. Price: £ 6.99 (UK). ISBN: 0-671-03398-0

Check out website: www.earthlight.co.uk


War, it seems, is never out of fashion.

Through The DarknessHarry Turtledove is known for his novels setting out alternative histories of the American Civil War and the two World Wars. Turning that idea on its head, the Second World War has been transposed to a place called Dervalai. Just like the Balkans, the land mass is a hotchpotch of countries with ever-changing borders.

Each country distrusts its neighbour. The neutrality of one country, Zuwayza, is tested nearly to breaking point when Kaunian refugees turn up on its shores. Other countries are already over-run and they have to make their own peace with their conquerors.

Despite the strangeness of the setting, with fearful dragons overhead (the real Spitfires) and leviathans patrolling the seas, basic human nature remains the same. Instead of feeding people into gas ovens to make them disappear they are used as human fodder to create huge amounts of destructive magic against opposing armies.

Algarve uses the Kaunians, their enemies but the King of Unkerlant uses his own subjects taken from expendable groups such as the old and the sick.

There are several 'viewpoint' characters brought forward from the two previous books, notably the Forthwegian Ealston and his Kaunian girlfriend Vanai, whom he is harbouring from his own people ready to send her to the Front. There are many other characters that represent all sides of the conflict and the human moral dilemma.

The war, engulfing everybody, continues and does not seem to be reaching any conclusion. However, on the tiny island of Kuusamo, Pekka and her fellow theoretical sorcerer, the elderly Ilmarinen are developing the most powerful and deep magic - this world's equivalent of a hydrogen bomb.

The realities of modern warfare are recognisable. Ethnic cleansing is given a new and even deadlier dimension. In this reality, the Mages use the life force of unwanted ethnic groups to inflict greater hurts on their enemies.

There is also indifference and sometimes the willing collaboration of the conquered populations. The problem with the book is the multitude of characters. There were too many to get to know. The chapters are sub-divided to follow each protagonist through a short period of their life.

This is confusing and the 'cast list' at the front together with the map is a handy addition. There is repetition of their history and motivation and this is irritating and intrusive. The vocabulary, particularly that of the soldiers, is limited. The continual use of the word 'whoresons' to describe the opposing forces is inane.

The target audience may well enjoy this latest instalment. There is some debate about which countries in this fantasy version represent the participant countries of WW2. The moral decisions about the use of people to create ultimate destruction will no doubt reach some conclusions in the final instalments.

Taking a period of history which is so well documented and placing it into an entirely new context is an interesting premise and deserves to be fully explored. However, I was disappointed in the structure of the book. The characters felt too separate from each other and rather like several stories than a complete and integrated narrative.

Overall I would be unlikely to seek out this story again as I do not feel sufficiently interested to find out what happens next.

Sue Davies


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