Nine barons vie for the throne of Aghamore, but the sorceress Aurya believes that the secrets encoded within an ancient, enigmatic text will make her lover, Giraldus, the next High King. The prophecies in the forbidden Thirteenth Scroll of Tambryn the Heretic suggest that whoever seizes the throne must first dispose a child it names the Font of Wisdom.Meanwhile, in the distant Great Forest, a blind healer named Lysandra who wields a mystic inner Sight is suddenly beset by dark dreams. Guided by the Scroll, Lysandra and two companions find themselves compelled to seek and save the unknown child-before Aurya can plunge the kingdom into a future of unending darkness.A COMPANY OF FRIENDSTalog was warming toward his companions, especially the healer Lysandra. She had the Hand of the Divine upon her-even if she knew it not.It was part of his training as a Guide to read the clues others revealed about themselves. Many things about his companions still puzzled him, however. Why were Renan and Lysandra not Joined-because she was a healer? Little as he knew about Upworlders, it was plain that they had the same feelings for each other that meant a male and female of the Cryf would go to the Guide to say the words of Joining.But Renan and Lysandra each tried to hide their feelings from the other. To Talog, it made no sense.
My first thoughts on this book were that it was a bit formulaic and that the author had a very "young" female voice. Once I got a bit further though, I found myself really drawn in and annoyed at things that interrupted my reading time.
Lysandra, a blind healer with a type of mystical Sight, is called by prophecy to help the "Font of Wisdom". There to help here will be a her wolf companion and a country priest. But the sorceress Aurya and a bishop with his eye towards ecclesiastical power will be out to stop her and put Baron Giraldus (Aurya's lover) on the High King's throne.
There are some mixed messages here regarding religion and magic. Female deities and other non-Christian religions are clearly evil and practiced by witches. The same church says that practicing magic in any form is wrong and immoral. Yet the prophet who Lysandra keeps seeing and who wrote the prophecy that the 3 companions are struggling to fulfill seems to have magic, and magic used on their behalf will be key to their venture.
There is descriptions of sexuality and violence, and in the first few pages sexual violence is alluded to.
I read this one as a younger human (middle school or early high school). I revisited it for a Popsugar Challenge prompt, and it was not as good as I remembered. Had the book changed or had I? Was my reading experience so much greater that I have narrowed in on my preferred writing styles? I think yes. I'm a stronger reader. I have greater preferences than I did as a young human. My ability to devour has morphed into an ability to discard. This one is a fine fantasy novel about a blind young woman who must pursue a child in order to save a kingdom. If that sounds interesting to you, give it a try! It might be the one for you.
I can not entirely remember the plot of this book. I just remember that I loved it. There was a lot of elements of herbology that I greatly enjoyed. I also loved her "sight" and the premise was amazing. I would give it 5 stars, but I remember putting the novel down for a period of time. I think it was because it got very slow at some points, but I truly cannot remember, and it may have just been because I picked up another one of my hobbies at that particular time.