The Curse of Chalion Lois McMaster Bujold 9780007133611 Books
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The Curse of Chalion Lois McMaster Bujold 9780007133611 Books
Over 10 years ago I was looking for a new book in a Book Store (GASP!) when I stumbled upon this book and The Paladin of Souls. I didn't discern that they were truly a 1st and 2nd in series pair of books and purchased PoS first and began reading. By the first dozen pages, I'd decided two things: that I really liked the writing and that I was obviously not "starting at the beginning". I immediately went out and grabbed The Curse of Chalion and it, along with The Paladin of Souls, quickly became two of my favorite books. I've read and reread this novel so many times that I can literally grab it, pick a page and start reading without any question as to where I am in the story and what went on immediately before or after. Lois McMaster Bujold is an excellent author and she is in truly great form here. If you like fantasy and enjoy stories more in the line of "intrigue and human foibles" rather than "Badass wades through piles of the corpses of his foes", I can't recommend it enough. The main character Cazaril is a man damaged beyond what most would survive both physically and mentally but he still retains wit and will enough to be a true hero; a man that I would truly admire should I live in his world and someone I would gladly spend time with. The world is well drawn and the characters stay true to their motivations and needs; no "plot necessary" shortcuts here. Curse of Chalion is truly literature set in SF/Fantasy and, if you enjoy that kind of well wrought story & story telling, you will be rewarded for your time and expense.Tags : The Curse of Chalion [Lois McMaster Bujold] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Lois McMaster Bujold has won the Hugo award four times, and the Nebula award twice. In this, her first epic fantasy,Lois McMaster Bujold,The Curse of Chalion,Harpercollins Pub Ltd,0007133618,Fantasy,Science fiction
The Curse of Chalion Lois McMaster Bujold 9780007133611 Books Reviews
This fantasy novel is part of Bujold's "World of the Five Gods" series, but stands well on its own. It had been languishing on my shelves for a couple of years. Two or three times I'd taken it down, read the first few pages, then set it aside. This week I tried reading just a little further, and was drawn in deeper and deeper, until I was hopelessly, helplessly engaged by the characters and their plight. I do not wish to spoil the book by revealing plot elements, but here are a few of the things that pleased me intelligent, humane writing with wit; a protagonist who is neither brash, nor swashbuckling, nor very young, yet is nonetheless a hero through and through; a fantasy setting that feels true, the gods and the magic and the twisted politics all convincing; secondary characters I cared about. I've enjoyed several of Bujold's science fiction books, but I liked this better. I liked it very much indeed. Highly recommended.
This is one of my favorite books of all time. If you enjoy Bujold's other books but aren't too sure about the fantasy genre, do yourself a favor and give this a read. I promise it'll be worth it. I had read the entire Vorkosigan Saga multiple times and I knew that I loved Bujold's prose, diction, and style, so when I spotted it in hardcover at Goodwill, I picked it up immediately. I love it so much that I purchased the edition as well so I could have it with me during any travels. (As an aside I have dual purchased almost all of Bujold's books in hard copy and digital because she's just that good in my opinion.)
It's an amazing fantasy story with dynamic and complex characters and outstanding world-building. Like her Shards of Honor (Vorkosigan Saga Book 2)/Barrayar (Vorkosigan Saga Book 3) duology in the Vorkosigan Saga, I could literally finish reading this book and flip back to page 1 to start again. Cazaril is similar to Miles Vorkosigan somewhere around the time of Cryoburn (Vorkosigan Saga Book 15) in that he was young and brash at one point, but now has a deep sense of right, wrong, and honor tempered by a full life of experience.
The book is sometimes funny, sometimes dark, but always thought-provoking. When gods influence the world, what is the true nature of fate and what decisions do we make for ourselves?
If you have read a lot of mainstream major fantasy over the last ten years, the work of people like Duncan, Jordan, Hobb, Brooks, you will likely enjoy this one very much. I have read two other books by this author, and this one is the best I have read so far.
The tale begins with a grimy old man making his way along the road. Eventually, you realize he is neither an old man nor the average person. The story takes the "special person who does not know he is special" trope and gives it a bit of a twist by making the hero, Caz, a thirty something man who has had lots of experience in the royal court but ends up in a battle which results in his being sold to a slaver. He is treated horribly on the ship and goes through what we later understand through bits and pieces of revelations is a sort of religious experience.
I am trying not to spoil anything; that is why I am being vague.
Anyway, as the story progresses we see the effects Caz has on the lives of the people in the kingdom he comes into contact with, especially two people he ends up assigned to oversee.
As a hero, Caz is likable and heroic but so totally unassuming you just can't help but like him. It will soon be discovered he has a dark and dangerous mission assigned to him by the Gods!!
OK, first of all, the writing is good in this book. No clunky sentences or terrible dialogue. The main characters are types in the sense we find them repeatedly in this kind of fantasy. Examples the inexperience royal who is mislead by his fawning followers who have terrible motives; the young woman who is smarter and stronger than she should be given the social roles of her gender; the old woman who is wise but judged crazy; the aging ruler who was once good but now is old and a bit crazy and weak. You get the picture. But the main characters are psychologically distinct and we see them develop and change.
Unlike The Game of Thrones where every character is psychologically developed and there are over a dozen main story lines all going at once, in this book we have the traditional focus on a limited few characters and there are none of the lengthy sections where chapter after chapter shifts to a totally new time and country. There are a few jumps where you start a new chapter to find that the trip they started out on at the end of the previous chapter is over and suddenly they are riding into a courtyard after a two day ride, and I remember at least one place where there was the old "winter gave way to dripping eaves and warm winds" time shift.
However, generally things move along without major jumps. The plot all focuses around the major group of characters and so while there are two separate orders of soldiers and a few religious orders, there is no real detail about them or the people in them or the political intrigues going on behind the scene. There is enough background here that if the author had wanted this could have been a ten volume series. The bad guys plot, of course, but mainly we see the results of this rather than read about the plotting or the psychology of the plotters, which is actually good here because the plotters are meant to cause problems not provide us with in-depth characters.
If the author had wanted, I easily saw a place about 3/4 of the way through where she could have ended "Book one" and then gone on to "Book Two" and fleshed out the characters and motivations and such a bit more rather than end the book. Things do move a bit quickly in the final fifth of the book and a few things resolve rather quicker than they might! (I wish the last fifty pages had taken more like one hundred pages.) But if anything you will only wish things had slowed down a hair because you realize you are about to end the reading experience!!
There is a little bit of tear jerking sacrifice toward the end that may make you sniffle a bit or bring a drop to your eye. But that is good. ) Lots of devious plots. Not much in the way of sword play, but it is not totally lacking in this, especially toward the end. The magic is more personal religious experience rather than fire ball throwing and mountain tumbling down stuff. No dragons. Sorry. There are some very interesting crows!
If you are looking for one of those series where things go on and on and every character is gone into in depth so that you fear the series will not be done before you shuffle off your mortal coil, this will not fully satisfy.
But if you want a stand alone, one volume, traditional high fantasy novel with interesting characters if not totally unexpected circumstances and themes, this will satisfy you. I very much recommend this book.
Just a quick note if you like this you might enjoy the old Barbara Hambly series The Darwath Series The Time of the Dark, The Walls of Air, and The Armies of Daylight. There are lots of one volume fantasies published twenty or thirty years ago that are excellent and have been forgotten.
I will try other of her books, though the one I am reading now by her, "Penric and the shaman," seems a bit light.
Over 10 years ago I was looking for a new book in a Book (GASP!) when I stumbled upon this book and The Paladin of Souls. I didn't discern that they were truly a 1st and 2nd in series pair of books and purchased PoS first and began reading. By the first dozen pages, I'd decided two things that I really liked the writing and that I was obviously not "starting at the beginning". I immediately went out and grabbed The Curse of Chalion and it, along with The Paladin of Souls, quickly became two of my favorite books. I've read and reread this novel so many times that I can literally grab it, pick a page and start reading without any question as to where I am in the story and what went on immediately before or after. Lois McMaster Bujold is an excellent author and she is in truly great form here. If you like fantasy and enjoy stories more in the line of "intrigue and human foibles" rather than "Badass wades through piles of the corpses of his foes", I can't recommend it enough. The main character Cazaril is a man damaged beyond what most would survive both physically and mentally but he still retains wit and will enough to be a true hero; a man that I would truly admire should I live in his world and someone I would gladly spend time with. The world is well drawn and the characters stay true to their motivations and needs; no "plot necessary" shortcuts here. Curse of Chalion is truly literature set in SF/Fantasy and, if you enjoy that kind of well wrought story & story telling, you will be rewarded for your time and expense.
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