Today is the day for me to reminisce about the Amber series or so it seems. However, the more into the series we get, it is harder to review it without making spoilers. It would be a shame to spoil this series for anyone, as the discoveries made along the way by Corwin & others are really interesting. Is it a spoiler to reveal that Oberon still has a part to play? I won' say how or why, but there is a reason why the father is referenced in the title. As The Hand of Oberon develops, many things from the previous novel become more clear. A traitor is revealed. Corwin is becoming to question everything.
...“Heredity or environment? I wondered wryly. We were all of us, to some degree, mad after his fashion. To be honest, it had to be a form of madness, to have so much and to strive so bitterly for just a little more, for a bit of an edge over the others. He carried this tendency to its extreme, that is all. He was a caricature of this mania in all of us. In this sense, did it really matter which of us was the traitor?”
Well, it does matter Corwin. The traitor pushed it a bit too far, didn't he? But is good you're finally seeing sense and being able to put your pride and ambitions aside. That's possibly the best part of this fourth book in the series. The reader can really see Corwin's personal growth. The changes in him are subtle, but the end of the novel Corwin is a changed man. Where Corwin felt only hate and anger, now he is able to feel sympathy. Corwin is definitely becoming more emphatic. Perhaps even Freud would agree that he has made some progress in his relationship with his father. Similarly, Corwin is able to see his brothers not only as chess figures in a game he is playing, but as human beings.
.“I wish that some time, long ago, something had not been said that was said, or something done that was not done. Something, had we known, which might have let him grow differently, something which would have seen him become another man than the bitter, bent thing I saw up there. It is best now if he is dead. But it is a waste of something that might have been.”
What is what brought about this change in Corwin? Figuring out his relationship with his father? Making new discoveries about the nature of known world? Forming meaningful friendships? Learning about the true origins of Amber? Whatever be the cause, as new answers appeal, Corwin find himself asking more questions. I liked this philosophical twist in his thinking. As much as Corwin is inclined to ask psychological and philosophical questions, the chaotic world of Amber waits for nobody. Like sharks, princes of Amber need to keep moving to stay alive. So, does Corwin. Don't expect this one to be any less fast paced and eventful than the other ones. New surprises all along the way, but at the same time the writing becomes more philosophical.