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She was one of the Crystal Singers, the élite, mysterious ones, who cut the crystals from the planet Ballybran - precious glittering crystals without which the universe could not function.
Sent to the planet of Optheria to repair the famous crystal organ, she was - at first - accorded all the honour and pomp due to her rank.
Then her life became threatened and she found herself isolated at the very heart of the planet, knowing that she alone had the power to confront and destroy the evil that had permeated the world of Optheria.
386 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1985
The ignominy of such a humiliating expedient combined with fear, disappointment, and her recent physical ordeal sent Killashandra into a trembling posture of aggrieved and contained fury.Also similarly to the first book, women's roles are a mixed bag. As a crystal singer, Killashandra works independently and very much earns her own keep on Ballybran. The symbiont she took on when she trained as a crystal singer conveniently makes her infertile but doesn't diminish her sex drive (and also makes her immune to disease that isn't caused by crystal or the symbiont themselves), so she can have all the unprotected sex she wants, and she makes ample use of that convenience with Lars. She is never slut-shamed, either by the narrative or by anyone around her.
Ch. 13: "Carrigana? [the alias Killashandra took on when she was stranded on the islands] Would you mind fixing some hungry storm watchers more of those excellent sandwiches?"Killashandra has a heroine's nadir once returning to Ballybran after completing her missions on Optheria, and then a . It's the kind of arc that's pleasing even when you know where it's going.
Ch. 21: Killashandra had punched up sandwiches which she now passed to the men.