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The Witchwood Crown

by Rindis on September 22, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

The start of epic fantasy stories often have a pacing problem. The desire to provide lots of background, and root you in an unfamiliar world mean that the plot moves like a freight train. It has a lot of momentum, and won’t stop for anything, and the start of the story is all about getting the wheels to start turning at all.

Meanwhile, space opera is capable of starting with a firefight, pausing just long enough to pull a farm-boy out of his dead-end life, and giving you a roller coaster for the rest of the ride.

To an extent, the prologue of The Witchwood Crown lives in the epic fantasy mode. A character is ambushed and killed; this is a signal that something is very wrong, but the rest of the book moves on without that scene impacting the plot at all. But, our mysterious victim, Tanahaya is not dead, and it’s something of a shock when she shows up halfway through the novel. Not that we get to know her or anything, as she’s at death’s door for the rest of the book.

Meanwhile, instead of the traditional single, or at least limited, viewpoint of epic fantasy, we see fragments of stories from a bewildering array of viewpoints. There is a lot going on, and we get to see a fair chunk of it. This means the plot is going at a fairly good clip the entire time. Now, it’s hard to say just what a lot of it means, and where the central plot really is, but it is easy to have confidence that they all have a bearing on what is going on, and this is all part of one cohesive whole, instead of say, three completely separate stories that happen to be packaged together like Game of Thrones.

Some parts do seem disconnected; I don’t see any connection in them to what’s going on in Nakkiga, the decided source of the big threat, which presumably the action will end up revolving around. But, characters do connect between these plotlines, there is motion from one to another, and so it is part of the whole. And one part got me thinking about series title, “The Last King of Osten Ard”. This may be bigger than a mere metaphysical threat.

Part of the reason for the format is that Tad Williams is coming back to a world that already got that very slow start. All the fragmentary pieces are picking up threads of a world that has already been developed, and he is endeavoring to get new readers up to speed as well as entertain return visitors to Osten Ard. It’s been a bit since the last time I read Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn, so the help was appreciated here too, and I have some confidence in saying that this series stands fairly well on it’s own. If you haven’t read the original, I do recommend going back to it, as it is one of the best epic fantasy stories out there. But, you can start here, and may well enjoy this more….

└ Tags: books, fantasy, reading, review
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The Lake Erie Campaign of 1813

by Rindis on September 14, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

This is intended as a short book for the National Parks service to sell as part of their memorial to the Battle of Lake Erie. The author was originally intending a much longer, definitive, work on the battle, which I think helped make this book much more solid.

This is a short book (just over a hundred pages without the appendixes), largely aimed at the general public, and it does a good job with the subject. It starts with a fair background to the War of 1812, its general course, and how the strategic frontier extended all the way out along the length of Lake Erie and into Michigan. Most of the book is from the American viewpoint, though there is of course time spent on British activities.

Along the way, there’s talk about the general design and construction of the ships involved, including recreations of the Niagara. There’s a denouement about a fight Perry and Elliot’s post battle fight over credit and actions during the climatic battle.

It’s a very short book, but serves its subject very well. The writing is clear, and goes through some very introductory material well. I’d like to see a much more comprehensive book on the campaigns around the Great Lakes in the War of 1812, but this is a great primer on the main part of that.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
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Four Princes

by Rindis on September 2, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Norwich’s book on the beginning of the Sixteenth Century successfully covers a lot of ground, is a great, somewhat light, read, and if you’re like me, perhaps to be missed.

I do generally recommend the book, and if you know just a little on the period, this a great entry point. This has been called Here I Stand, the book. And if you’re a fan of that game, then this will help give some background to what’s going on. The real point of both is the number of things that we hear about separately that were happening all at the same time. This is a very dynamic period in Europe’s history, and that gets lost in all the examinations of individual bits. And my biggest problem with this book is that Here I Stand shows all of this so much better than Norwich does.

My second biggest problem isn’t Norwich’s fault. Knowing all the things that were happening already, I have already done a fair amount of reading on some of the subjects here, and this light overview can’t—and shouldn’t—compete. So, if you don’t know so much, I do recommend this book, and then I recommend going on to some very good popular histories on the period. To that point, I would recommend Roger Crowley’s Empires of the Sea, James Reston, Jr.’s Defenders of the Faith, Leonie Freida’s Francis I, and Alison Weir’s The Six Wives of Henry VIII. That certainly doesn’t cover everything, which does point up just how much Norwich is tackling here.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
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Cursed Kings

by Rindis on August 21, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

The fourth book of the excellent Hundred Years War series by Jonathan Sumption picks up in 1400, with a visit by Byzantine Emperor Manuel II to Paris. This echoes the start of the first book with the funeral procession of Charles IV; both are used to set the scene and show the current physical state of Paris.

Past that, the start of the book feels much like the third one. There is a slow grind of positional warfare as peace talks and truces continue. Extra tension has been caused by the accession of Henry IV, who the French refuse to see as the rightful king of England. In fact, the cash-strapped nature of the war gets much more acute in England as rebellion flares up in Wales, troubles on the Scottish border rise, there is internal trouble, and Henry IV needs to make grants to various nobles to shore up his own support. This leaves England nearly completely unable to prosecute the war, and barely able to defend important enclaves such as the Pale of Calais. About the only thing to go right is naval raiding in the Channel, which is stepped up by the French, but ends up with the English doing far more damage.

But all of this is increasingly sidelined by troubles in the French Court. Charles VI suffers continued “absences” where psychotic episodes leave him unable to govern, and governance devolves to his uncles, with the balance of power tilting towards his brother, Duke Louis of Orleans after the death of the first Duke of Burgundy. The fight over royal power and the money to be skimmed off of the French treasury turns more personal, with the assassination of the Duke of Orleans by the second Duke of Burgundy.

From this point, France is effectively in a state of civil war. However, it is easy for us to think of such things as clean political breaks, with declarations and articles making the political case for one side. And… that latter is generally true here with John of Burgundy issuing letters denouncing the extreme wastage of money, and using a broad platform tax reform for popular support. At the upper levels, it’s a lot murkier, as there’s no clean break in the political community, with elements of both sides looking for a moderate solution to how to distribute power.

And then the English are back. Henry V’s finances are much better than his father’s, and he is very much a ‘warrior king’, eagerly going on campaign in France in an attempt to enforce the terms of the Treaty of Bretigny, or something much like them. It is at first a failure, with the siege of one port wasting much of the large English army, and despite some hard marching, the English are outmaneuvered and forced into the most famous battle of the war: Agincourt.

Such a stunning against-the-odds victory pays dividends for Henry V, who manages to take most of Normandy, even as the French are still fighting themselves, and trying to figure out how to all fight the English instead. All hopes of this are destroyed with the assassination of John of Burgundy by the most hard-line elements of the opposing faction. The leadership of that faction has already changed some from time and attrition. French troubles in this period are made greater by going through a couple crown princes (Dauphins) in a couple of years.

And as things get worse, Henry V decides to go for it all, declaring himself the true King of France, and later marrying a daughter of Charles VI with a treaty that he’d inherit when Charles VI finally dies. Sumption spends a little time trying to unpack this. It is generally seen in a very nationalistic French light, but much of that rhetoric comes later. It’s much harder to tell what general opinion was at the time. Certainly, it did not break up the Armagnac/Orleanist faction, and doubtless made them dig in their heels in further determination to prosecute their side of the civil war.

The book ends in 1422, with deaths of Charles VI and Henry V. As ever in a conflict largely conceived of in feudal terms, deaths of prominent people mark a major change in the fortunes of war, and pretty much the entire rest of the cast has already changed out before we get here. The fifth and final volume of this series is due out soon, and it’s going to have to do a lot of heavy lifting to finish off the story. It will also just be heavy lifting. These books have grown from around 700 pages just about 1000, and I don’t think the last one will be any shorter.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
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Engaging the Enemy

by Rindis on August 13, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

The third Vatta’s War book picks up where the second left off, but keeps itself largely on immediate concerns, instead of doing a lot with the big McGuffin-related issued that dominate the second book.

Mostly, that’s because there’s other issues that need addressing. But the ISC fades into the background including Rafe, who gets less screen-time and sent out of the plot at the end (actually, he’ll probably get to be a separate plot line viewpoint character next time). Instead, we’re concentrating on the fact that a near-scrapping merchant hauler has been joined by a larger, more powerful ship that has been seized from pirates.

The legality of that last (it was originally registered to Vatta Transport) is one of the low-powered engines of the book. Among the more legal problems, it also splits up Kylara and her cousin Stella, so that distance can start adding to misunderstandings between them. This is potentially interesting, and the instinct here is good, but it’s not handled that well, which helps the book underperform.

Aside from those two, we get some spy-thriller action back on Slotter Key. The action was well done, but I have my problems with this plot line, because the principles involved are too perfect. It also resolves out too perfectly with clandestine action. I think leaning over to the political side a bit, and presenting some turmoil as people in the government start wondering if perhaps they’ve got people who have aided and abetted a vicious attack on civilian targets on their own planet, and how to get them out of power…. Of course, that’d be a far more complicated plot line, and perhaps a far more unrealistic one to get the plot where it needs to go.

Meanwhile, bigger events are happening. We slowly get to see this is a larger conspiracy between a lot of pirates, and whoever is behind the new ansible system. A system is invaded and taken over mid-way through, with word rapidly leaking out, and all the fear reactions that follow from that. And that helps propel the part of the book that is it’s main contribution to the overall plot. Kylara Vatta has a Letter of Marque from Slotter Key, and she now has a ship that can actually fight. But what’s going on is far bigger than any one ship is able to handle. She’s going to have to find a way to motivate a larger force into taking this on.

So, in many ways, this is slower burn all the way through. However, the tension does ratchet up through the novel, and we have a nice action scene at the end. All the previous strengths are here: we have a good lead character, an interesting situation, and good writing. As a middle book, it serves it purpose in the larger narrative well, and keeps things moving enough that it doesn’t feel like the plot is bogging down, though there’s only partial resolution here.

└ Tags: books, reading, review, science fiction
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