A novelette of 10,000 words - The Keep of Dare is an enclosed fortress: no one knows all its secrets and corners. When people start disappearing, the Archmage Ingold Inglorion and his two Californian companions - warrior Gil Patterson and novice wizard Rudy Solis - are faced with the possibility that some deadly entity is hiding in the darkness of the Keep. And the situation is not improved when Ingold himself disappears.
Ranging from fantasy to historical fiction, Barbara Hambly has a masterful way of spinning a story. Her twisty plots involve memorable characters, lavish descriptions, scads of novel words, and interesting devices. Her work spans the Star Wars universe, antebellum New Orleans, and various fantasy worlds, sometimes linked with our own.
"I always wanted to be a writer but everyone kept telling me it was impossible to break into the field or make money. I've proven them wrong on both counts." -Barbara Hambly
Barbara Hambly labels this and other Keep of Dare novelette’s as the “Further Adventures” of Gil Patterson, Rudy Solis, and Ingold Inglorion, because life didn’t end for these guys when the Darwath trilogy ended. And being a fan of Darwath (and many other of Ms. Hambly’s fantasy series), I want to thank her for gifting these short stories/novelettes to her fans. They are indeed priceless additions to these tales with Pretty Polly being no exception.
The Keep of Dare has established a normal routine five years after the Rising of the Dark, and while Gil Patterson and Ingold Inglorion continue in their roles as keep guard and keep wizard, they now are also parents to a small baby. But while motherhood is stressful, what Gil has recently been dealing with is vivid dreams of her life and loved ones left behind when she abandoned her former life as a southern Californian graduate student to follow Ingold back to Darwath. Images that make her wonder if they are as true as her old dreams of Ingold Inglorion were before his subsequent arrival upon earth years before.
What is especially unsettling is how Gil’s ominous dreams are occurring at the same time as the disappearance of people around the keep — specifically people in the upper and outer levels where strange noises and reports of spirits have been rampant ever since the remnants of humanity took shelter in the ancient, obsidian cube that is Dare’ Keep.
When Ingold decides to accompany witnesses into the dark recesses of the keep to investigate the disappearances, things go from bad to worse as he himself disappears!
As Gil desperately tries to find the father of her child and the greatest wizard remaining in the world, she quickly discovers that magic and ancient technology will not be of much use to her. Instead, she will have to rely on her quick wits and old-fashioned ingenuity to unravel this newest mystery of Dare’s Keep.
All in all, this was yet another excellent story of this group of survivors. Ms. Hambly mixing in enough mystery (both magical and normal), further characterization, and tidbits of world building to make this a must-read for Darwath fans. And for those unfamiliar with the series, there is no real need to understand the previous books to understand what is going on here and enjoy it all. Highly recommended!
This short story is set in the Darwath universe 5 years after Gil and Rudy have arrived there.
I would not recommend it to people new to the Darwath universe, but for those who - like me - know and love the original saga and its characters this is some delicious reading candy.
I finally treated myself to this terrific short story, another entry in the Darwath series and written as a 'Further Adventure' taking place after the 5-part book series that began with The Time of the Dark.
Pretty Polly is an eerie, suspenseful, character-filled read that delivers more plotting and better characters in it's relatively short story arc than a lot of authors are able to cram into an entire novel.
Hambly is an author who reliably delivers the goods: her works are universally splendid reads and her characters, even those that appear only briefly, are real people in real and varied situations, carefully researched and richly written.
As I said Pretty Polly takes place after the first 5 books so if you haven't read them, (a) I envy your chance to meet this universe for the first time and (b) read them. Along with Tolkien's Middle Earth and Hughart's "Ancient China" (Master Li and Number Ten ox series), Hambly's Darwath is one of the top ten destinations available to the Fantasy/SF reader.
A nice return to the Darwath series that i stumbled on accidentally but quickly fell back into. Excellent short-short, but you should read the original trilogy before you try it or you'll find yourself misplaced.
Hambly's note at the end of this short story--and it is a short story despite being billed as a "novelette" on Amazon--is that she has always wondered what comes after "happily ever after" and that these stories (in her various worlds) are forays into that idea. I, for one, enjoy visiting characters of well loved books again and seeing what they're up to, and so I am pleased to find these tales. While I currently only have the Darwath novelettes, I intend to collect others and visit with the old friends that inhabit their pages.