Monday, March 10, 2014
The Rogue by Trudi Canavan : a review
When I first started the Australian Women Writers challenge for 2014 I'd planned on reading ten different authors but after stumbling across The Rogue by Trudi Canavan and having enjoyed the first book in this series so much I simply threw that idea out the window.
The Rogue is book 2 of Trudi Canavan's Traitor Spy trilogy and follows on from the events of The Ambassador's Mission. The story will conclude in book 3: The Traitor Queen.
It's interesting the approach you take to reading a book which you know will be incomplete as far as the story goes. I expect less of a middle book than I do of the first or last book in a series. The Rogue cleverly puts all the characters in place for the final book, introducing a few new characters and events which will obviously impact upon the conclusion of the story. Given that The Traitor Spy trilogy is built around already existing characters from The Black Magician trilogy and may perhaps lend itself to another series, I'm also not expecting book 3 to be an ultimate conclusion. It's a fantasy series. Worlds are built which constantly change and the scope for new characters and new stories which inhabit those worlds is never-ending - Terry Pratchett's Discworld series is a classic example of this.
I like this series. I find the characters interesting and the worlds they inhabit equally so. I am also impressed by the way in which Canavan deftly builds these worlds and cleverly twists the events surrounding characters so that you know there's going to be a confrontation. By the end of this book the reader knows that there are some serious issues to be addressed. There is political intrigue, assassination attempts, drug use, black magic, murder, mayhem and mystery. Underlying the entire story is the question of black (or higher) magic and how all the cultures of this world approach its use and application. When young Lilia accidentally learns black magic through reading a book, the belief that this form of magic could not be learned from books is turned on its head. When she also determines how to unblock her magic it additionally brings into question everything that has been considered as true in regards to magic itself. The Guild has a lot of questions they can no longer ignore nor deny. And about time too.
I keenly await reading book 3 now. I'm happy with the questions Canavan has posed to her characters and interested to see how the various pieces will tie together. I enjoy her writing style and have adapted well to the constant flow from character story to character story to characters story within the same chapter. It adds to the sense of the passage of time and shows how each character is developing in relation to the others. While The Rogue brings the new magician character of Lilia to the forefront of the action in Kyralia and focuses less on Cery, you know he is still there in the background and will continue to have a major role to play in the story. Learning more about the Traitors, the Sachakans, and the Duna adds to the overall landscaping of this world. Each small piece of information adds to the whole and establishes the footings for the following book.
This is solid fantasy writing. Trudi Canavan is an Australian writer of great skill and definitely a voice to pay attention to within the Fantasy genre.
4/5 stars (really liked it).
Monday, January 27, 2014
The Ambassador's Mission by Trudi Canavan : a review
The Ambassador's Mission is book one of the Traitor Spy trilogy and follows on from Trudi Canavan's previous seven novels (two trilogies and a standalone). For a reader coming in without any of the previous back-story there is little sense of missing any required history or appreciation of the characters. Canavan cleverly reintroduces the important players and provides whatever context is required for the story to progress. I'm still amazed that I've gone all this time and not read any of Canavan's stories before.
There are three key characters whose tales intersect at various levels and who the story follows throughout. Sonea is a Black Magaician and tied to the guidance and control of the Kyralian Guild of Magicians. She is a Healer and has emerged from within the ranks of the very poor to be a powerful magician (and somewhat feared by her colleagues). Her son, Lorkin is also a magician but an Alchemist. He agrees to accompany Lord Dannyl, the newly appointed Guild Ambassador, to Sachaka as his aid - both to help Dannyl in his search to fill some of the gaps in Kyralian history and also to explore more of the world than the city of his birth. Cery is an old friend of Sonea and a Thief in the City, he's familiar with the darker side of life.
"The Ambassador's Mission" ends on the delightfully teasing note of intrigue and deception, and as any good story does leaves you wanting more. Sonea has helped catch the rogue magician and Thief Killer; Cery has avenged his family's deaths and grown closer to his only surviving child (and learned a nice tidbit of information about a certain other Black Magician.... no spoilers); and Lorkin has come closer to discovering more about the Sachakans, the people they call Traitors, his father Akkarin, and hidden magic.
I thoroughly enjoyed this story and am keen to continue reading the trilogy to discover what happens with our three main characters. It has everything: political intrigue, clash of cultures, fighting, magic, avoiding capture, more magic, quips. But more importantly it is enjoyable and I really do want to know how this story ends. I've ended up caring about these characters, curious about the Sachakans and Traitors and blood gems and magic, wondering how the Wasteland fits into all of this, and whether the Guild will let go of old prejudices and fears.
Monday, May 9, 2011
Dragons in the Metcalfe - #ra2011 - part one
Back on March 9th I had the fun of participating in the annual Readers Advisory seminar at the State Library of NSW – Dragons in the Metcalfe. It’s taken me some time to compile my thoughts on that day, but here they are…….. (this may take a while .............)
Following on from an Intro from Ellen Forsyth & the Executive at NSL, we launched straight in to a fabulous Skype session with American Fantasy Author, Brent Weeks - @brentweeks - the author of The Night Angel trilogy and The Black Prism (first title in the Lightbringer series). Inspired by Edgar Allen Poe at 12 yrs old, Weeks was comforted by the language and sense of kindred spirit he found in reading books – and noted that Librarians have the skills necessary to give the right books to the right people!!
After a beautiful description of his relationship with his older brother, Weeks explained how he came to write The Black Prism – a book about brothers and what happens when the “rules” for fighting are broken. In any novel you use the people around you to inspire characterisation. In The Black Prism, Gavin & Dazen have a love / loathing relationship (like many siblings). The use of Kip as ‘the fat kid’, the outsider who is necessary for success is pertinent to this story. It’s about keeping secrets and complicated love – “the human heart in conflict with itself”. Personally, it’s absolutely brilliant!
Weeks went on to talk about Fantasy as a genre as some authors he regards as being important to the genre. Whilst Tolkein popularised the genre it did not start with him. Rather Lester Del Rey had a bet with other publishers which led to the genre becoming commercially viable.
* Terry Brooks and his Sword of Shannara promoted the genre and really kicked it off.
* Robert Jordon’s Wheel of Time series shows the sheer scope of huge Fantasy (epic at 13 books with Book 14 due out in 2012).
* The 1990’s brought us George R. Martin and the concept of Fantasy without the Romanticism (A Song of Ice and Fire series).
* Joe Abercrombie’s Fantasy is gritty (UK, First Law series).
* Whilst Scott Lynch is described as “oceans meets Fantasy”.
* Brandon Sanderson, currently finishing Jordan’s Wheel of Time series, writes very fast, has a number of YA titles already (including Alcatraz versus the Evil Librarians), and is bound to be as big as George R. Martin.
* Peter V. Brett – The Painted Man;
* NK Jemison – The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms;
* Nnedi Okorafor – Who fears death?;
* Paolo Bacigalipi – YA, exploring political / social issues; Sci-Fi / dystopian future;
* Pat Rothfuss – The Name of the Wind, has beautiful prose and is literary Fantasy, will be a best seller.
*For YA / Urban fantasy try Gail Carraigher – Soulless, Blameless, Nameless (light Victorian vampire novels), and
* Jim Butcher (huge!).
So why did Brent Weeks choose to write Fantasy? Fantasy as genre is huge, like a playground without fences. The sky is the limit for imagination – the author creates the world, presents the unfamiliar, and allows readers to see things with new eyes. In reading about the ‘thugi’ in India during the period of British Imperialism (ambushed travellers by joining merchant caravans and at an agreed spot would strangle merchants and disappear with the goods – they did not believe in spilling blood), discovers how hard it is to untangle the truth of history, where our own perspectives influence how we view the events / or the import/impact of the events. Writing Fantasy allows authors and readers to break away from this and create a sense of magic exploring new cultures – telling stories with lots of action and moral dilemmas.
I was impressed by Brent Weeks’ presentation, especially when our webcam went a little skewed and whilst we could still see him, he lost all sight of us and got a lovely shot of the ceiling!! Presenting via Skype isn’t easy but he was an absolute joy to listen to and so open and forthcoming with his viewpoints and ideas and oh so generous in giving of his time to talk with us as he did.
On a personal note. I first read The Night Angel trilogy and decided that I had found my new favourite Fantasy author. I was re-inspired to read more and to get closer to this genre which is already one of my favourites. Reading The Black Prism I was completely blown away by Weeks' capacity to create this amazing, believable world and characters that I simply needed to know more about.
I had always read light fantasy stories about dragons and faeries and the like as a child but I was first introduced to Fantasy as a very young teenager when someone handed me The Lord of The Rings and I did not sleep until I finished it (yes, 3 days is a very long time, thank goodness I started it on a Friday evening!), closely followed by Stephen Donaldson's The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, Unbeliever. From that moment I was hooked on Fantasy. The Night Angel trilogy and The Black Prism has brought me back to that point and I am inspired once again by this fantastic genre!

