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The Ea Cycle #3

Lord of Lies

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Death and destruction surround the Lightstone in the second book of this magnificent and deeply moving fantasy epic. The Cup of Heaven has been wrested from the hall of Morjin the Liar, the Great Red Dragon himself, by Valashu Elahad, Valari knight and seventh son of the King of Mesh. As Lord Guardian of the Lightstone, his task is to find the Maitreya, the one person to whom its secrets will be revealed. Even so, the power of the Lightstone pours through Valashu like a golden fire. There are many who believe Valashu himself to be the Maitreya. But Valashu can find no voice of certainty within himself. He only knows that if a man proclaims himself falsely to be the Shining One, then he shall become a new Red Dragon, only mightier and more terrible. Then the scryer Kasandra declares a new 'This is the vision that I and my sisters have that you, Valashu Elahad, will find the Maitreya in the darkest of places; that the blood of the innocent will stain your hands; that a man with no face will show you your own.' What could be darker than finding the Lord of Light inside the cavern of his own heart?

Paperback

First published September 1, 2003

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About the author

David Zindell

35 books173 followers
Biography at Wikipedia.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Bradley.
Author 9 books4,956 followers
May 2, 2021
Very interesting book in the series. It's VERY much a Grail tale like the others, but it picks up with what happens after finding it, with every kind of interesting snag that comes with all the local kings and warriors who covet it or play extended politics.

The first part has a lot of an Ivanhoe feel, knights and tournaments and processions, and a focus on the Lightstone which is just a stand-in for Christ, etc., without BEING that kind of thing at all. Indeed, what it IS, is a kind-of epic SF that includes many, many civilizations and planets, a time span in the tens of thousands of years, and people who have been alive as long as that. And the Lightstone itself is there to bridge the gap between worlds.

While the overt ideas are pretty well-worn, the deeper ramifications are rather gorgeous.

And when we get to the Arthurian-type tragedies, the Ea Cycle doesn't disappoint either. Who is good and just, who is worthy, who is free from sin -- all of this plays right into the core idea of Power, and the idea that absolute power corrupts absolutely.

The betrayals and the reasons and even the SUBJECT of betrayal in this book are pretty complicated and carefully explored. Lord of Light? Aye. And Lord of Lies.

But above all, this IS a true epic fantasy, with many battles, many quests (continued here), and it feels rather awesome -- considering that you, as a reader, want an epic Grail quest with new-age concepts, truly excellent worldbuilding, and interesting, complicated characters.



Profile Image for Terence.
1,347 reviews478 followers
August 19, 2008
I tried to like this series. I slogged through the first two books (The Lightstone, The Silver Sword) and I gave this one 250 pages but I had to give it up.

I remember reading Zindell's first novel, Neverness, soon after it came out and not being terribly impressed so I never picked up any of his other stuff until I came across The Lightstone on one of my libraries' New Book shelf. The jacket blurb sounded intriguing, and an epic fantasy based more on a Buddhist worldview than the Medieval/Christian one found in most books (the savior figure is even called the "maitreya") interested me.

But the execution is awful.

The reader is constantly being torn away from immersion in the book by clunky exposition and the characters tend to speak in sermons.

I have more potentially interesting books on my shelf than to continue with this one.
Profile Image for Pacyfa.
293 reviews7 followers
March 22, 2013
This is a good follow up book in the series due to its faster pace which personally I think is Zindell's downfall. It is a very dark book and the main character is comes across much more human in this part of the series.

1,390 reviews5 followers
July 27, 2010
Didn't like the way this one ended. Still a good book. The author has left it so he can write another in this series.
Profile Image for S. L..
65 reviews2 followers
November 25, 2013
Did I want the book to end the way it does? No. Is it a lot more true to life than the usual happy-go-lucky fantasy where everybody gets what they want, and the hero is a saint? Yes
Profile Image for Sammy.
1,991 reviews20 followers
May 15, 2016
This is the filler book of the series really. Not a whole awful lot happens, but it moves everything in place for the final showdown. Could have been condensed quite a bit, I think.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews