[7/10]
Hear the Dream of Hyradin. 'And so came the Beautiful One, the Eater of Death, to strip the bones of the world. First clothed in Man's Flesh it came, crowned with a dread helm of darkness and none could stand against this One but Four.
First shall be the Guardian, a vessel of light in the darkness. Then the Shaft and the Vanguard, who shall fail and yet not fail if the Guide, the Unseen One, goes forth. And at the last shall again be the Guardian, whose portion is bitter, bitter as gall when they meet under the Pillar of the Sky'
The second book of the Tamir Triad is governed, like the first one, by the inflexible rules of Prophecy. All is Predestination and the insignificant humans are just ants moving down paths already chosen by Gods. In the first book, a child is killed and another is hidden in plain sight in an effort to ensure compliance with a generations old dictum than only a Queen of the Royal line can save the land of Skala from destruction. To make their Will known, these cruel gods are not adverse to bring the seven plagues (war, famine, pestilence, etc) on the heads of the unfortunate people of the kingdom, all for the crime of being led by a man. Admittedly, this King Erius and his 'Waffen SS' chief wizard Nyrin are guilty of numerous atrocities and deserve to be brought down, but I still feel the misfortunes visited on the innocent bystanders were a bit over the top.
All of this was already established in book one, which followed closely the childhood of Tobin, the child of prophecy. Readers familiar with the fantasy genre know that it is customary for the second book in a trilogy to raise the stakes of the conflict between good and evil and to evolve from a personal quest to a world shattering cataclysm. Flewelling makes no exception to this unwritten rule, and that is why she comes up with the new prophecy that I have used to open the review.
This Gnomic Utterance (copyright Diana Wynne Jones) encapsulates the best and the worst that the genre has to offer. It will probably sound like gibberish to the uninitiated, but to the fans it is like that sign on the old maps : "Here be Dragons!", promising adventure, and a journey into wonder and danger. Likewise for me, the Tamir trilogy showcases the best and the worst that the fantasy genre has to offer:
On the plus side, Lynn Flewelling is doing a great job at characterization, continuing the study of sexual identity and of different kinds of discrimination : against magic users, against women, against the poor. The attention to detail that makes the reader care about the fate of Tobin, of squire Kirothius, of wizards Arkoniel, Iya and Lhel, is also slowing down the pace of the novel to a crawl, at least in the first half of this second book, as Tobin is still in training as a warrior and companion to the King's son and heir. Luckily for the more impatient reader, the action really takes off in the second half, where the author demonstrates that she can write battle scenes with as much ability as her character studies.
Still on the plus side is the magic system and the use of necromancy, although in the later battles, this magic tends to become generic fireballs and thunderstrikes. I have hopes of improvement and of more revelations about the magic system in the third book, where I expect the neighboring Plenimaran kingdom to play a greater role.
On the minus side, with so much importance given to prophecy, the plot becomes predictable and the much too clear separation between the heroes and the villains feels simplistic to the modern reader more used to shades of grey characters. The internal conflict of Tobin / Tamir is very well done, but it doesn't quite make up for the typecasting of the rest of the crowd.
Recommended to readers who enjoyed "The Bone Doll's Twin" - indeed it doesn't make any sense to start in the middle of the series, and to those who like traditional fantasy with young underdogs fighting evil overlords. I'm heading now into the third and last of the trilogy, expecting major battles against impossible odds and a lot of fun along the way.