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Spirit Gate by Kate Elliott

#1 User is offline   Werthead 

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Posted 29 December 2007 - 06:42 PM

From the blog:

Quote

Kate Elliott is the author of the highly successful Crown of Stars series, which I reviewed earlier this year. Crossroads is her new series, a seven-volume series which is divided into two trilogies with a linking book between them. Spirit Gate is the first book of the first trilogy (to be followed by Shadow Gate and Traitor's Gate).

For centuries the land of the Hundred was ruled by the Guardians, powerful beings to dispensed justice, aided by their reeves, effectively a police force riding giant eagles. The Guardians have disappeared and are feared dead, but the reevers remain, overstretched and in increasingly few numbers as chaos and barbarism spreads across the land. Reeve Joss is given the difficult task of restoring order to an area in the south ravaged of bandit attacks, threatening trade between the Hundred and the Sirniakan Empire to the south-west.

Meanwhile, in lands far beyond the Hundred and the Empire, a Qin warrior named Aniji marries a local woman, Mei, and finds himself and his troop of 200 soldiers drawn into danger and adventure, forcing them to flee their lands and journey into the Hundred, where they find the land on the brink of full-scale war.

Spirit Gate is a compelling story set in an interesting and well-realised world. Whilst Crown of Stars was deliberately set in a very rigid society highly reminiscent of medieval Europe, Crossroads is far more original and fantastical, although the two works share some character tropes and ideas. The book opens with a nice piece of misdirection that holds the attention and directs the reader into the story. However, the pacing is mismatched and key characters, most notably Joss, disappear for long stretches. In other places the timeline is a bit confused, with Elliott not being afraid to revisit the events of several chapters past from another POV, although once you get used to it this plot device does start yielding useful information. There is also a rather odd tendency for central characters to engage in frivolous discussions and banter in the middle of mortal danger, which defuses tension from the book, and after a very impressive build-up to a major confrontation at the end of the book, the actual final battle is resolved in perhaps two pages at best, which is very disappointing.

Unfortunately, the central threat in the book is left rather vague and undefined. Is chaos and lawlessness returning in general because the Guardians are gone and some people are taking advantage of it, or is there a much darker master plan at work? Elliott hints at both possibilities but never really gives us enough information to come to a conclusion.

Spirit Gate (***) is an enjoyable and solid fantasy novel with some very nice ideas which doesn't entirely come together satisfyingly. Still, the novel leaves me intrigued to read the sequel, which I suppose is its main objective. The novel is published by Tor in the United States in paperback, and by Orbit in the UK in trade paperback and mass-market paperback. The sequel, Shadow Gate, is released in the UK on 3 April 2008 and in the USA on 15 April 2008.

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#2 User is offline   Slum 

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Posted 29 December 2007 - 11:17 PM

Wert, you're a reading machine. Do you have a day job, or are you just a naturally prolific reviewer?

Slumgullion, has never read Kate Elliot, and probably never will.
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#3 User is offline   caladanbrood 

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Posted 29 December 2007 - 11:23 PM

Are there battles? Are they as tawdry and badly written as the ones in King's Dragon?
O xein', angellein Lakedaimoniois hoti têde; keimetha tois keinon rhémasi peithomenoi.
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#4 User is offline   Werthead 

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Posted 30 December 2007 - 02:07 AM

There is one battle, which the entire last third of the book builds up to and is resolved in approximatley three paragraphs. I was flicking back and forth wondering if a whole chapter had fallen out or something.

The standard of writing overall is much higher than in the Crown of Stars series, though.

Quote

Wert, you're a reading machine. Do you have a day job, or are you just a naturally prolific reviewer?


I'd say I'm naturally fast, plus I read for an hour non-stop every lunch hour at work, which usually gets me through 100 pages in hardcover or trade and about 120 in mmpb. Plus I recently became single again, so my reading speed went up a bit.
Visit The Wertzone for reviews of SF&F books, DVDs and computer games!


"Try standing out in a winter storm all night and see how tough you are. Start with that. Then go into a bar and pick a fight and see how tough you are. And then go home and break crockery over your head. Start with those three and you'll be good to go."
- Bruce Campbell on how to be as cool as he is
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