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New Books
by John O'Neill
It's all about the books. This week we kick of Black Gate's regular books column with a look at
the most interesting new releases for the first week of September -- including a new Shannara
novel from Terry Brooks and new work from Andre Norton, Gene Wolfe, L. E. Modesitt, and plenty more. Grab the mouse with
both hands and hold on.
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Cover Art by Steve Stone
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Ilse Witch
The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara, Book 1
by Terry Brooks
Del Rey, September 5, 2000
455 pg, $26.95 (hardcover)
ISBN: 0-345-39654-5
It's been over four years since First King of Shannara, the last Shannara novel -- a long time
to wait for fantasy fans. Brooks' hasn't exactly been idle in the interim, publishing a dark fantasy trilogy
(A Knight of the Word) and a Star Wars novelization, but the announcement of a new Shannara
novel has generated significant buzz. The latest installment kicks off a new series and
takes place thirty years after the events of Talisman of Shannara (1993), in which Walker Boh reluctantly became
a Druid. Now Walker, the only living Druid and the only survivor of the battles of a generation ago, is about to be
caught up in an old and deadly mystey.
"When the mutilated body of a half-drowned elf is found floating in the seas of the Blue Divide, an old mystery resurfaces. Thirty years
ago, the elven prince Kael Elessedil -- brother to the current king -- led an expedition in search of a legendary magic said to be more
ancient, more powerful, than any in the world. Of all those who set out on that ill-fated voyage, not one has ever returned...
Until now. For the rescued elf carries a map covered with mysterious symbols only one man has the skill to decipher. That man is Walker
Boh, the last of the Druids. But someone else understands the map's significance, someone dark and ruthless: the Ilse Witch, a beautiful
but twisted young woman who wields a magic as potent as his own. She will stop at nothing to possess the map -- and the magic it leads
to. To stop her, Walker must find the magic first.
So begins the voyage of the Jerle Shannara. Aboard the sleek, swift airship are an elven prince; a Rover girl; a monstrous creature part
man, part enigma; and a young man named Bek Rowe, who may unknowingly hold the key to the success of the mission -- or to its
cataclysmic failure. Now, as old secrets come to light, sowing seeds of mistrust and suspicion among the crew, the Jerle Shannara flies
into the face of unknown terrors, while the Ilse Witch and her dark allies follow, waiting to strike..."
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Cover Art by Darrell K. Sweet
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Scion of Cyador
Saga of Recluce, Book Eleven
by L. E. Modesitt, Jr.
Tor, September 22, 2000
541 pg, $27.95 (hardcover)
ISBN:0-312-87379-4
This is the second new Recluse novel this year (Magi'I of Cyador appeared in April), and the eleventh overall.
I'm sure there are other modern fantasy sagas that have published eleven volumes... I just can't think of any
at the moment. What's most amazing about the Saga of Recluce is that a) it started less than a decade ago (the first volume, The
Magic of Recluse, was published in 1991), and b) Modesitt has been writing at least three other popular series
simultaneously, including The Spellsong Cycle (3 volumes), the Tangible Ghosts sequence (2),
and the Ecolitan series (4), as well as numerous standalone SF novels such as Gravity Dreams
and Adiamante. This is the kind of man collectors love and trees hate.
"Scion of Cyador continues the story begun in Magi'i of Cyador. Exploring the rich depths of the history of Recluce, Magi'i introduced
Lorn, a talented boy born into a family of Magi'i. A fastidious student mage who lacked blind devotion, Lorn was made into a lancer
officer and shipped off to the frontier. Having survived an extended stint fighting both barbarian raiders and the giant beasts of the
Accursed Forest, Lorn has proven himself to be a fine officer . . . perhaps too fine an officer. As his prowess has grown, so has his
number of enemies and rivals. Too much success has made him a marked man. When he returns to his home, both he and his young
family become targets while all of Cyad is in upheaval over the death of the Emperor."
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Other Recluse Novels
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By Andre Norton
By Sasha Miller
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Cover Art by Luis Royo
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To the King a Daughter
Oak, Yew, Ash, and Rowan, Book One
by Andre Norton and Sasha Miller
Tor, September 13, 2000
320 pg, $23.95 (hardcover)
ISBN:0-312-87336-0
Andre Norton has been called the "Grand Dame of Science Fiction and Fantasy," and for good reason. Her brand of
accessible, exciting fiction has been entertaining genre readers for three generations, beginning in the 1950's with
novels such as Daybreak 2250 and The Beast Master. Here she teams with new comer Sasha Miller
(Ladylord, Falcon Magic) to kick of a new four volume cycle.
"To the King a Daughter begins the cycle of Oak, Yew, Ash, and Rowan: the four powers of the world who have been warring forcenturies.
The Clan of Ash is slowly dying, their totem tree in the sacred square withering away to nothing. There is a prophecy that a
daughter of Ash will rise again, but none have survived the mass killings, thereby rendering the prophecy unfillable.
But deep in the swamps, in the care of the witch-healer all need and all fear, there is a young girl-woman who can not be the witch's
daughter; a girl who, in fact, by virtue of her beauty and elegance and simmering power, can only be a Daughter of Ash, the one who will
rise to fulfill the prophecy -- and the destiny of her birthright."
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Cover Art by Marc Fishman
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The Life of Sir Aglovale de Galis
by Clemence Housman
Green Knight Publishing, July 30 2000
320 pg, $14.95 (reprint, trade paperback)
Original publication: 1905
ISBN:1-928-99908-5
Green Knight Publishing spun out of the Chaosium, publishers of the brilliant Call of Cthulhu RPG, to escape the great
tentacled shadow of that game and focus on Arthurian fiction -- in particular, fiction based on or around Greg Stafford's
Pendragon role playing game. Over the last decade or so they've published a number of
handsome volumes in trade paperback, including Edward Franklin's Arthur, the Bear of Britain, To the Chapel Perilous
by Naomi Mitchison, and many others.
This time they've restored to print one of the great moldy classics of Arthurian literature, The Life of Sir Aglovale de Galis,
written by Clemence Housman (author of Were-Wolf) in 1905.
"Originally published in 1905 and long unavailable in an affordable format, The Life of Sir Aglovale de Galis is a psychological
reconstruction of the life of a minor character in Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur, showing the dark underside of the Round Table. It is a
Job-like tale of the rogue knight Aglovale, son of King Pellinore, and his path toward spiritual redemption. Written in the fine slow prose
of contemplation, Sir Aglovale was Clemence Housman's third and final novel. It is also her finest achievement, a work of such impact
that famed mystery novelist Ellis Peters called it "By far the finest work on an Arthurian theme since Malory." "
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Also From Green Knight
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Art by Stephen Youll
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A Clash of Kings
A Song of Fire and Ice, Book Two
by George R. R. Martin
Bantam Spectra, September 12, 2000
1056 pg, $6.99 (reprint, paperback)
Original publication: March 1999
ISBN: 0-553-57990-8
Bantam Spectra has simultaneously released the paperback editon of George R.R. Martin's best selling A Clash of Kings,
second volume of A Song of Fire and Ice, and the hardcover edition of the third, A Storm of Swords.
Clever marketing people.
This is one of the most intelligent and popular fantasy sagas of the last few decades, and the hardcover
edition of A Clash of Kings was picked as the top book of 1999 by the readers of the SF Site.
If, like many people, you've sworn off waiting years between installments and now make sure an entire
trilogy is in print before starting the first one... well, you've got a long road ahead.
Martin has recently announced that A Song of Fire and Ice will constitute at least six volumes.
(I'd say give it up. Start now and beat the rush.)
"A comet the color of blood and flame cuts across the sky. And from the ancient citadel of Dragonstone to the forbidding shores of
Winterfell, chaos reigns. Six factions struggle for control of a divided land and the Iron Throne of the Seven Kingdoms, preparing to stake
their claims through tempest, turmoil, and war. It is a tale in which brother plots against brother and the dead rise to walk in the night.
Here a princess masquerades as an orphan boy; a knight of the mind prepares a poison for a treacherous sorceress; and wild men
descend from the Mountains of the Moon to ravage the countryside. Against a backdrop of incest and fratricide, alchemy and murder,
victory may go to the men and women possessed of the coldest steel... and the coldest hearts. For when kings clash, the whole land
trembles."
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In the Same
Series:
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First Volume

As Dave Wolverton

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Cover Art by Darrell K. Sweet
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Brotherhood of the Wolf
The Runelords, Volume Two
by David Farland
Tor, September 2000
659 pg, $7.99 (reprint, paperback)
Original publication: May 1999
ISBN:0-812-57069-3
What I remember chiefly about The Runelords was the inventive magic system. Lords and ladies (and villains and
scoundrels) could receive "endowments" -- gifts of attributes such as strength, smarts, and charm -- from their subjects,
who then lose those attribites themselves (often becoming "dedicates," people who have surrendered so much they are
virtully helpless). It's a system wide open to abuse, and in the first volume Raj Ahtan, a conquoror, strides the
land demanding endowments from his victims... snowballing in power and might towards his vision of becoming the immortal
Sum of All Men. Farland (who also writes as Dave Wolverton) returns to the world to pick up some of the more intriguing
plot threads from the first book.
"In The Runelords, Raj Ahtan, ruler of Indhopal used enough forcibles to transform himself into the ultimate warrior: The Sum of All Men.
Ahtan sought to bring all of humanity under his rule -- destroying anything and anyone that stood in his path, including many friends and
allies of young Prince Gaborn Val Orden... including Gaborn's father. But Gaborn fulfilled a 2000-year-old prophecy, becoming the Earth
King, a mythic figure who can unleash the forces of the Earth itself.
And now the struggle continues in Brotherhood of the Wolf. Gaborn has managed to drive off Raj Ahtan, but Ahtan is far from
defeated. Striking at far-flung cities and fortresses and killing dedicates, Ahtan seeks to draw out the Earth King from his seat of power,
in order to crush him. But as they weaken each other's forces in battle, the armies of an ancient and implacable enemy issue forth from the
very bowels of the earth."
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Cover Art by Jim Burns
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On Blue's Waters
Book of the Short Sun, Volume One
by Gene Wolfe
Tor, September 11, 2000
381 pg, $15.95 (reprint, trade paperback)
Original publication: October 1999
ISBN: 0-312-87257-7
If you're new to Gene Wolfe's novels this is going to take some explaining, so hang in there.
About, oh, twenty years ago Gene Wolfe started writing a novella that eventually turned into a four-volume science fantasy series,
known today as The Book of the New Sun (back when we were reading it as it came out, it was "that kick-ass
new Wolfe series.") It featured the assistant torturer Severian, banished from his guild for the crime of love, and
his episodic adventures on a decadant, far-future earth. Later a fifth book, Urth of the New Sun (1988) turned
the series into a quintology. New Sun was extremely well received, and became one of the most critically
acclaimed genre works of the decade.
In the early 90's Wolfe began a second series, also four volumes, set in the same baroque far-future, this time on an
enormous colony ship moving out through the stars: The
Book of the Long Sun. It was likewise well loved, and both of the early series are still in print from Tor,
in handsome omnibus editions which collect two novels each (see a sampling to the right).
I bet you can tell where this is going. Last year Wolfe released On Blue's Waters, the first volume of the
Book of the Short Sun, and followed that with In Green's Jungles in August. On Blue's Waters,
which begins a rousing adventure tale featuring one of the characters from Long Sun, was one of the best
books of last year.
In short: it's a lot to bite off, but if you're in the mood for a rich banquet of science fantasy, with fascinating
characters and one of the most well-developed settings in the genre's history, Gene Wolfe is your chef for
the evening.
"On Blue's Waters is the start of a new major work by Gene Wolfe, the first of three volumes that comprise
The Book of the Short Sun, which takes place in the years after Wolfe's four-volume Book of the Long Sun.
Horn, who was the narrator of the earlier work, now tells his own story. Though life is hard on the newly settled planet of Blue, Horn and
his family have made a decent life for themselves. But Horn is the only one who can locate the great leader Silk -- the central character of
The Book of the Long Sun -- and convince him to return to Blue and lead them to prosperity. So Horn sets sail in a small boat, on a long
and difficult quest across the planet, trying to return to the Whorl -- the giant interstellar ship still inhabited by the civilization that brought
the settlers to Blue -- in search for the now-legendary Patera Silk."
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