|
The
Outstretched Shadow (The Obsidian Trilogy book one) by Mercedes Lackey
and James Mallory
pub: TOR. 604 page hardback. Price: $27.95 (US), $38.95
(CAN). ISBN: 0-765-30219-5
check out website: www.tor.com
and www.mercedeslackey.com
There's
a certain kind of reader that's really going to love this book.
After all, you can tell that main character Kellen is 'Our Hero'
not merely by the fact that he's the square-jawed one with flowing
blonde hair on the cover, clutching a unicorn but he's also the
son of the Arch-Mage of Armethalieh, City of the Golden Bells, home
of High Magick. If your attention begins to drift at that point,
can I also add that Chapter 21 is called 'Beyond The Elven Lands'.
Considering I can only just about stomach elves if they come by way
of Tolkien, I can't honestly say I'm one of those that will fully
appreciate 'The Outstretched Shadow'. Not that I disliked it, really.
The mixture of Mercedes Lackey's prolific experience and co-author
James Mallory's work as a professional ghost-writer makes for an easy
read, guaranteed not to wear out any brain cells along the way.
It
just so happens that there are people who like their fantasy complete
with unicorns, elves, centaurs and what-have-you and there are those
of us that get their fill of that from 'Lord Of The Rings'.
If you're of the latter persuasion, the overblown cover is pretty
much going to put you off anyway, which is a slight shame. Kellen,
thankfully, really isn't the standard fantasy hero but a slightly
naive, quietly rebellious only son who starts to realise the mages
that control his 'perfect' city really aren't so benign.
He then gets tangled up with forbidden Wild Magic, exiled from home
and, eventually, the inevitable quest narrative kicks in about two
thirds of the way through.
The city, Armethalieh, is probably the most interesting section of
the book: a nice, slightly Big Brother-ish model community where control-freak
Mages know all and see all. Just ripe for Kellen to rebel against.
The slightly SF flavour is possibly the most original thing in it,
balanced against a magic system that stresses the cost of asking anything
of the powers-that-be. This is something that gets overlooked in fantasy
as a rule and it's refreshing to find a magic where the price has
to be considered carefully before any spells are performed - because,
sometimes, the cost is too high to be accepted. It's an oddly mature
aspect for a book that panders to all the fairy tale fantasy concepts
otherwise.
Once the narrative leaves the city, however, there's not a whole
lot to keep the interest. The good guys are fairly pure as the driven
snow. The bad guys are literally Demons or misguided Mages being manipulated
by aforementioned Demons, so there's not a whole lot of room for moral
grey areas.
Aside from the fact that 600 pages seems an awful lot for a plot
that's fairly linear and lacking in complexity, I'm astounded that
they can get an entire trilogy out of this. While the characters
are sympathetic, the last hundred pages drag and the cliff-hanger
ending is not so much tense as a relief that it's over.
I'm not exactly waiting on tenterhooks for book two but the fact
is you could do a lot worse than read this if the current Tolkien-mania
has whetted your appetite for quest fantasy with lots of elves or
you've devoured the entire works of Mercedes Lackey and are still
thirsting for more.
Jennifer Howell
|
|
OTHER REVIEWS - February 2004
BOOKS
The Outstretched Shadow by Mercedes
Lackey and James Mallory
Sunshine by Robin McKinley
Legacies by L.E. Modesitt Jr
Diplomatic Immunity by Lois McMaster
Bujold
The Separation by Christopher Priest
First Meetings In The Enderverse
by Orson Scott Card
Restoration by Carol Berg
Dragon Venom by Lawrence Watt-Evans
The Dolphins Of Pern by Anne McCaffrey
Phobos by Ty Drago
Air by Geoff Ryman
Reach For Tomorrow by Arthur C
Clarke
Idlewild by Nick Sagan
The Mammoth Book Of Best New SF
# 16 edited by Gardner Dozois
1610: A Sundial In A Grave by
Mary Gentle
Eats, Shoots & Leaves by Lynn
Truss
Sundoom by Tony Hollett
Floater by Lucius Shepherd
Trading In Danger by Elizabeth
Moon
Richard Matheson: Collected Stories
Vol. 1 edited by Stanley Wiater
The Gates To Witchworld by Andre
Norton
Star Trek Deep Space Nine: Mission
Gamma: Lesser Evil by Robert Simpson
The Killing Of Worlds by Scott
Westerfeld
Bibliomancy by Elizabeth Hand
Nobody True by James Herbert
Star Trek: The Original Series:
Gemini by Mike W. Barr
The Twist by Richard Calder
MUSIC
Red Alert by Warp 11
COMPUTER GAMES
Wallace and Gromit - Project Zoo
RPGs & WARGAMES
Heavy Gear: Vehicle Companion
Heavy Gear: Earth Companion
MAGAZINES
On Spec: The Canadian Magazine
Of The Fantastic vol 15 no. 2 & 3
CHAT
ABOUT THIS STORY
Advertise
Here (More ...)
|