Great reviews this week including A Feast for Crows, more Game of Thrones HBO series previews, and a preview of the Game of Thrones: Genesis video game. Interviews with Joe Abercrombie and Guy Gavriel Kay, and don’t forget to check out the history behind popular fairy tales post.
Great reviews of great books by great authors, from The Heroes to The Long Price Quartet to Summer Knight and more. Interviews with George R.R. Martin, Guy Gavriel Kay, Daniel Abraham and more, and Game of Thrones gets renewed for a second season on HBO.
Book review of Guy Gavriel Kay’s A Song for Arbonne
I’ve read Tigana, and it was an absolutely wonderful experience. Unfortunately, I read it before I started Fantasy Book News, so I don’t have a review to share my thoughts on one of Guy Gavriel Kay’s other novels. Luckily, with A Song for Arbonne, Kay delivers another real treat.
First and foremost, as the name implies, A Song for Arbonne places much emphasis on music. It is this quality that reminded me of The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss, and his heavy use of music in that series. A Song for Arbonne actually places a large emphasis on art as a whole, with music, poetry, and theater all making appearances in this novel. Music in particular is viewed by the characters in Kay’s world as being the highest form of expression, which Kay eloquently communicates in this passage:
One poet I know has gone so far as to say that everything men do today, everything that happens, whether of glory or beauty or pain, is merely to provide the matter of songs for those who come after us. Our lives are lived to become their music.
The characters that inhabit Arbonne and the surrounding territories are simply majestic. Blaise is a man who has turned his back on his father, his country, and attempted to find solace in another land. He cannot escape his past however, and the novel focuses on his realization of this fact. We see deception among the entire cast, especially between the sexes, with men and women alike appearing in locales and situations that one may frown upon. Another storyline follows the flight of Blaise’s sister-in-law from her country, carrying the male child who is potentially next in line to the throne in her womb. These are only samples of a few of the many intricate stories Kay crafts in A Song for Arbonne, there are many, and they are richly intertwined. While the plots are delicious, Kay’s characterization is what shines in A Song for Arbonne. Here you will find real people, with the same desires and problems that we face in our world. The characterization is nothing short of masterful.
Also in the vein of masterful is Kay’s ability to paint a scene with words. Rather than try to describe his mastery of description myself, I think a sample would serve best:
There was a fireplace, not lit. Candles in scones on the walls and on tables placed around a richly furnished and carpeted room done in shades of dark blue and gold. Wine on one table, he saw, goblets beside a flask. Two, no, three doorways opening to inner rooms, a pair of very deep, high-backed chairs facing the fire. The windows on the outer wall were open to the breeze; Blaise could hear noises of revelry from below. There was a familiar, hard bitterness in him now, and a curiosity he could not deny, and a third thing, like the quickening hammer of a pulse, beneath both of these.
Another trademark of Kay’s novels, as I’m coming to learn, is his liberal use of words that remind me of my grade school vocab list. I found it so entertaining that I had to jot them down when I came across them, and here is a sampling of the more than 50 words that you can learn while reading a novel by an author as highly skilled with the English language as Kay:
A Song for Arbonne Vocab Checklist
admonition
coruscating
inexorable
penchant
admonitory
depredations
inimically
perfidy
aggrieved
diaphanous
inneffably
phlegmatic
ambivalent
diffidence
innocuous
profligate
assiduously
effontery
interdicted
racoux
assuaged
equanimity
itinerant
rapacious
audrade
escutcheon
licentious
recalcitrant
calamitous
excoriation
liquescent
sardonic
capricious
fastidiousness
malediction
stentorian
celerity
fatuous
mellifluous
trammeling
choleric
garrulous
obdurate
tremulous
convivality
indefatigable
obeisance
In addition to the fantastic world building, the truly authentic characterization, descriptive scenes that will whet your appetite, and the benefit of expanding your language skills that all come with A Song for Arbonne, Kay still manages to work in some of the truly more magical elements of fantasy, those rare moments where a fantasy novel comments on culture in terms general enough to work within the fantasy novel as well as our real world:
Courage and skill and the rightness of a cause were sometimes not enough. They were seldom enough, he thought, tasting that truth like poison in his mouth: Corranos and Rian had shaped a world in which this was so.
There are so many more shining elements in A Song for Arbonne that I would like to impart, but I fear this review would start to turn into a novel itself, so I can only leave my recommendation. And for A Song for Arbonne, that is my highest, the grade I’ve only in the past reserved for A Game of Thrones and Elantris, a full 10 out of 10 stars. A Song for Arbonne is a shining moment in epic fantasy literature, and should be used as an example for years to come as the grade of quality the genre has the potential to offer.
Reviews of The Wise Man’s Fear, The Crippled God, Death Mask and more. Interviews with Guy Gavriel Kay and Terry Brooks, and a barrage of new Game of Thrones HBO series videos, this time each featuring an individual family. I for one am a little disappointed the House Stark video is set to “private” on YouTube.
A Dance with Dragons gets a release date, and The Wise Man’s Fear gets released. I’m not sure what more I could ask for. Well, how about a review of The Wise Man’s Fear, 3 interviews with Patrick Rothfuss, Rothfuss reading from The Wise Man’s Fear, and the first full-length trailer for the Game of Thrones HBO series. Rockin’.
Reviews of a few novels this week, including one of my favorite reads this year, Lamentation by Ken Scholes. Interviews with Guy Gavriel Kay, Brent Weeks, and Scott Bakker. HBO released a 10-minute trailer for the Game of Thrones series this week, and Orbit Books offers a little elven holiday cheer.
Holy schnikes! Where to begin this week? How about reviews of books by Tad Williams, Mark Chadbourn, Mark Charan Newton, Paul Hoffman, and Jo Graham? Or maybe interviews with R.A. Salvatore, Guy Gavriel Kay and Naomi Novik? Not to your liking? Try The Way of Kings tour schedule, Stephen King’s The Dark Tower becoming a film trilogy and a tv series and the babes of Dragon*Con on for size. Still not happy? Will a new trailer for Towers of Midnight please you? No? Ok, then check out The Guide to Writing Fantasy and Science Fiction, answer the question of what hobbits, robots and yahoos have in common, and check out The Guild: Season 4, Episode 8. Thirsty for more? Well, you’ll have to look elsewhere, I’m spent.
Great reviews crossed the blogosphere this week, from Under Heaven by Guy Gavriel Kay, to The Scarab Path by Adrian Tchaikovsky and others. Check out the interviews with Brent Weeks, Patrick Rothfuss, Ursula K. Le Guin, and James Cameron. Rounding out this week in fantasy blogosphere news is a review of The Eye of the World #4 comic, cover art for the Knife of Dreams eBook, and a desktop wallpaper for Brent Week’s The Black Prism.
This week we’ve got a review of one of my favorite fantasy reads so far this year: Lamentation by Ken Scholes. Also check out the interview with Jim Butcher over at SciFiNow. A classic Frazetta sold for 1.5 million over the past week, and Tor made the cover art of Brandon Sanderson’s A Way of Kings available as desktop wallpapers, so grab ’em while they’re hot!
Reviews take a back seat this week as we mark the passing of a legend. Legendary fantasy and comic book artist Frank Frazetta has died at age 82, and the world has lost one of its most famed fantasy artists in one single moment. Below you’ll find the obituary from Boston.com, along with a few galleries of some of Frank’s art, which I’ve enjoyed over the years. He’s the only artist for which I’ve ever downloaded fantasy art and used it as my desktop background image. He’ll truly be missed.
On a lighter note, Jones soda has created a variety of D&D Spellcasting sodas, which I strongly advise you check out. Also, Under Heaven by Guy Gavriel Kay is getting some good press this week, and Joe Abercrombie has some surprising news regarding the launch date of his forthcoming The Heroes. Giddy up.
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