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The Eyes Of God by John Marco
Pub: Gollancz. 789 page paperback. Price: £ 7.99
(UK). ISBN: 0-575-07392-6
check out website: www.orionbooks.co.uk
Readers
of fantasy and myth will immediately pick up on the influences in
this book. They are obvious. My first thought was, 'Oh my God, it's
a re-write of the Arthurian legend- in David Gemmell style!' And
that has to be the final summation.
That is basically it.
We
meet the characters Cassandra (Guinevere), Lukien (Lancelot) and
Akeela (Arthur). In a mad divergence, however, Marco breaks away
from the ineffectual acceptance of Arthur and mutates Akeela into
an insane, obsessive, violent King who sees conspiracy and hate
everywhere.
Cassandra is dying with cancerous growths erupting in her bowels
and the King hears of a sovereign amulet that can not only save
her but make her immortal.
The problem lies in the fact that if any human sees Cassandra,
the cure will stop working and she will die. Akeela finally wages
war on the inhumans- a clutch of people who outcast by their societies
because of deformity, gathered together in a secret place under
the protection of disembodied beings called the Akari.
Akeela's goal apart from vengeance is to regain the eye Lukien
in his final meeting with Cassandra, where his gaze broke the curative
or preventative spell, took to return to its rightful owner.
It is a heavy read. Not because it is overly long, it simply has
so much that happens. From the three main characters two die and
the novel goes from being the tale of a noble and idealistic ruler
to a blood-drenched maniac.
Humans are depicted in all of their idiosyncratic, narrow-minded
and flawed glory. The path between humanity and bestiality, Marco
avers, is a narrow rope bridge over a gaping chasm. The tale has
its dash of heroism and glorious fighting but the predestined fate
attached to the Arthurian myth hovers over the tale like a particularly
malevolent rain cloud.
Once this story has played out, David Gemmell's standard practice
of mounting the odds against the 'good guys' takes over. All in
all, it is simply an amalgamation of fantasy influences with little
originality.
Sana Master
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