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The
Fifth Sorceress (Book 1 of The Chronicles Of Blood And Stone) by Robert Newcomb
pub: Bantam Press. 886 page paperback. Price: £ 6.99 (UK).
ISBN: 0-553-81453-2 check out website: www.booksattransworld.co.uk
It
is time for the old king to step down. The crown prince of Eutracia
has reached the age of thirty and, as is traditional, he is to take
the throne.
Unfortunately,
Prince Tristan doesn't want to be king, preferring his rather relaxed, carefree
life just the way it is. Since the banishment of the evil Coven of Sorceresses
and the end of the war three hundred years ago, Eutracia has been peaceful and
serene, so with the Directorate of Wizards to aid him the King has little to do
but supervise the day-to-day running of the kingdom. Tristan would rather practice
swordplay with the Royal Guard. If only something would happen so he didn't have
to be King... Lucky
Tristan. The Coven returns at the head of an army of bat-winged soldiers, interrupting
the coronation and butchering the royal family and their wizardly advisors. Kidnapping
Tristan's sister and stealing the jewel from which all magic originates, the Sorceresses
leave Eutracia in chaos and return to the land of their exile, intent on brainwashing
Princess Shailiha and taking control of her as-yet unborn child. For Tristan and
his sister are the Chosen Ones, their coming prophesied long ago by a vanished
race.
So, aided by the lone surviving wizard of the Directorate, Tristan
begins a race against time to rescue his sister and regain the jewel before Shailiha
becomes the Fifth Sorceress and the Coven enslaves the world. On the way, he learns
a lot of harsh lessons, forcing him to grow up and deal with his responsibilities.
As volume one of 'The Chronicles Of Blood And Stone' and Robert Newcomb's
début novel, 'The Fifth Sorceress' can be taken as an indication of what
to expect from the new author and the rest of the series. Without an established
fan-base, Newcomb has to convince through the quality of his writing and the story
he tells, unlike an established author resting on his laurels. Unfortunately
this does not bode well for the rest of Newcomb's work, because 'The Fifth Sorceress'
is not very good, pure and simple. The plot is nothing new - ancient evil once
defeated in titanic battle returns to wreak death and destruction while lone hero
confronts his destiny. It has been done many times before, and done much better.
On top of that, the story is filled with unlikely plot devices and convenient
coincidences, not to mention logical inconsistencies that don't, despite Robert
Newcomb's apparent beliefs, disappear when a character explains them away in sophistry-ridden
speeches. Therein lies another problem: Far too much background information
is relayed to the reader via long, windy explanations by knowledgeable characters
to ignorant ones, Newcomb not seeming to have heard of the rule 'show, don't tell'.
Now we come to the characters. Tristan himself is fairly well realised, his playboy
personality and relaxed attitude to life effectively conveyed, and during the
course of the book his metamorphosis to responsible maturity is slow and convincing,
even if the events which cause it are not. Sadly, the Prince is - with
one exception - the only character to receive such in-depth treatment, the sorceresses
that make up the main villains of the piece seeming particularly two-dimensional,
while little or no motivations or explanations of their actions are made. Even
the soldiers under their command, the appallingly named 'Minions of Day and Night'
are more convincingly realised, a great deal of their backgrounds and culture
relayed during the course of the book. Kluge, the commander of the Minions,
seems far more dangerous and far more real than the sorceresses ever do, his strengths
and weaknesses almost as well explored as Tristan's. To be fair to Robert
Newcomb, 'The Fifth Sorceress' is not all bad. Much of the description of scenes
and locations is well phrased and evocative and the complicated way in which all
magic derives from a single gem is intriguing, if somewhat contrived to aid the
plot. The prologue is by far the best part of the book, stirring the imagination
and giving the impression that the main body of the story will continue its gritty,
dark flavour. However, the novel quickly descends into stilted dialogue and poorly
realised characters, failing to live up to the promise of the prologue. By the
time the uninspiring, bizarrely clichéd climax rolls around I found myself
caring little for the fate of the characters or the world in which they live.
Clunky, unoriginal, and contrived, 'The Fifth Sorceress' is a book that
brings nothing new to the genre and attempts to recycle corny old formulae as
fresh and new. The novel never manages to evoke any emotion beyond a feeling of
bemused confusion and at times drops into the comically ridiculous. As such, I
am relegating it to my 'New clichés for old' shelf. Martin
Jenner
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