A Review of The Ladies of Mandrigyn, by Barbara Hambly
The Ladies of Mandrigyn, by Barbara Hambly
Del Rey (311 pages, $2.95, March 1984)
The first note I made on The Ladies of Mandrigyn was, “too many adjectives!” I also took an immediate dislike to the main character, a mercenary captain who routinely buys and keeps teenage concubines.
The second problem resolved itself nicely during the course of the story, but the adjectives never did let up. If you like spare prose, this is probably not a book for you.
Before I talk about the story, I should mention that I’ve only read this book once. For all my previous reviews, I chose books that I’d read before. If these reviews have a theme, after all, it’s “good books you probably don’t know about,” so I started with some stories I remembered fondly. With this one, I checked to make sure it was the first of a series (the other two are The Witches of Wenshar and The Dark Hand of Magic) and bought it.
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In a post on his blog last week, Canadian science fiction author Robert Sawyer asked “
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