Jack Greenwing is good at scouting. He's renowned for being able to hold on in battle long past bravery. He was once given a trophy for his courage by the hand of the Emperor himself.
At Loe, where the Stone Speakers can call down avalanches and landslides, he was sent out on a scouting mission as a siege closed in on his company. He returns to see it being lifted because of treachery, and is there to witness the five remaining members of the command staff be led off in chains into the mountains, far from the border of the Empire.
He once held a border until the rest of his army joined him: nothing will stop him from attempting a rescue, though snow is falling in the mountains and he must fight those who can walk through stone.
"Stone Speaks to Stone" is a standalone short story related to the Greenwing & Dart series. If you've read those, it is the true tale of what happened to Jemis' father at Loe; if you haven't, Greenwing & Dart tells the story of what happens to Jack's son Jemis ten years or so after this story takes place.
I walked across England in 2013, fulfilling a long-held dream. I'm currently the sexton of an Anglican church in Nova Scotia, which means I am keeper of the keys and opener of doors (and shutter-off of alarms). I have a PhD in medieval studies from the University of Toronto, looking at poetry and philosophy in the works of Dante and Boethius -- both the poetry and the philosophy come into my stories a great deal (and occasionally the Dante and the Boethius).
I like writing about the ordinary lives of magical people on the other side of the looking glass ... and the extraordinary deeds of ordinary folk, too. Three of my favourite authors are Patricia McKillip (especially 'The Riddle-Master of Hed' trilogy and 'The Bell at Sealy Head'), Connie Willis ('Bellwether' and 'To Say Nothing of the Dog,' which latter would make my top-ten books on a desert island), and Lois McMaster Bujold ('The Curse of Chalion' and its sequels).
This is a short story/novella that fills in the controversial gap of what happened to Jemis Greenwing's father, Jack. Jemis of the Greenwing & Dart series. The Goddard filler omits how 'hero' Jack returns from "the" battle and meets his demise. Interesting sorcery at play in the story.
Goddard seems to enjoy writing these little tid bits. Nice intermission from the longer things she pens.
Really interesting novel in that it is one of the most openly colonial, from the perspective of Jack Greenwing, who is a general in one of Astandalas' armies fighting to expand its borders. A good short story, but be warned that Goddard's portrayal of this pov is kind of a mixed bag. While "looking down on the civilization of people not in the empire" would be a surprising choice based on the rest of her corpus, the self-justification and excuses for war pair poorly with the standard liberal politics of a Goddard protagonist. It leaves me feeling like this book was stuck balancing the cool edginess of a war general with the need to keep Jack as a "good" character, at the cost of what could have been a truly interesting character study.
A short story about greenwings father. Nicely written but these snapshots don’t give us enough background to really care about the characters. Plus…the empire is kind of the bad guy. So hard to root for them.
A roughly-standalone prequel novella to author Victoria Goddard's Greenwing & Dart series (which is itself just a smaller piece of her overarching Nine Worlds fantasy saga). I've chosen to read it after the first three G&D novels, which feels like the right choice, as a central question throughout those stories concerns the actions and fate of Jemis Greenwing's father Jack during a recent military campaign, which doesn't get fully resolved for his son until the end of book 3. Reading this title first, with its explicit depiction of one particularly important event that receives conflicting reports later on, would have punctured some of that tension, or at least replaced it with a certain dramatic irony.
But there's not much meat on the bones of this installment, and I'm personally not a fan of how it depicts the Astandalan Empire. In other books from this setting, like The Hands of the Emperor, the gradual expansion of that ruling body has been seen as a neutral or positive result of natural cultural contact, with newly-annexed lands gaining from being brought into the fold of the wider civilization and its magics and largely retaining their original character and customs. Here we see it instead as an outright strategic conquest that's being resisted brutally by the locals, and while that may be more realistic and add nice shading to our understanding of the realm, it's hard to square with the cozy vibes of Kip and his liege in Hands. (It's also not as though this story is anticolonial on the level of its surface text -- the would-be colonizers are the good guys whose poor captured soldiers are being tortured by their barbaric enemies, after all. The subtext behind the conflict is ugly and not to the invaders' favor, but it doesn't exactly feel intentional on the writer's part.)
But Goddard can still spin a yarn like the best of them, and the adventure plot here of a desperate rescue mission behind enemy lines is thrilling enough if you can ignore the above implications. It won't go down as a favorite of mine, but it's not a bad read overall.
This is a prequel novella to Greenwing and Dart books. It’s about Jack Greenwing, Jemis’ father. Is your heart breaking already, because you know what’s waiting for him?
This is a story of courage, self-sacrifice, fealty, perseverance, a desperate rescue. It gets very dark.
”He was naked and alone and bound at the wrists and ankles, in a stone cave with ice down one wall, at the mercy of folk willing to destroy themselves rather than submit to the Empire.”
The people the Empire of Astandalas is fighting against in this story do unspeakable things to the prisoners of war.
”I can stand,” the General said, something in his voice making it clear there were other things he could not, now, do.”
You root for Jack, of course you do. He is also a loyal soldier of the Empire, fighting in yet another… colonial conquest. (The Fall that is to come is a catastrophe, yet it’s an evil Empire that will fall!) The colonial aspect puts the reader in a moral tangle. This is not something I’ve encountered in a Nine Worlds book before! Interesting, and well done.
P.S. This is marked as book 0.5 in the series, but reading it after Bee Sting Cake worked really well.
I really like everything I have read by Goddard, and it almost always gets me in the feels. Stone Speaks to Stone is no different, but if you sit back and consider it with a critical eye, you are rooting for conquering imperialists in a very literal fashion. It is specifically from the PoV of a soldier who believes in The Cause, which displays Goddard's skill as a writer, especially as she has written from other PoVs in the same universe that do not share these views or opinions and the empire does indeed fall. It is interesting for me to read a work that interacts with something I have discussed before regarding other books: personal heroism and belief does not automatically make someone In The Right, and it is not limited to The Good Guys, as it were. Being brave doesn't immediately make your cause just.
It's a lot to pack into (and unpack from!) a novella, whether or not it was on purpose. Given the rest of my experiences with Goddard's work, I do think it is on purpose.
Also Mad Jack Greenwing wrestles with and kills a giant aggressive magical ice boa constrictor (?!) that may or may not ALSO be venomous with the hair ornament of one of his deceased comrades. Silently. Because guards are right around the corner. SO THERE'S THAT.
I've started to read Victoria Goddard's amazing books just little over a year ago. Now I'm very near that wonderful and dredful moment, when I'll have to wait for the next book to be written. Tales of the Nine Worlds quickly became my favourite series ever. This is one of the short ones. It is basically a short story, not a novel. For a war story it is surprisingly... nice may not be the right word for it, but I cannot think of anything else. Pro ty, kdo sérii nečetli: Série Greenwing & Dart začíná tím, že se Jemis Greenwing snaží nějak srovnat s velkou hromadou ošklivých věcí, které se mu přihodily, z nichž asi nejhorší je fakt, že se jeho otec nevrátil z války. Tahle povídka vypráví příběh Jakoryho Greenwinga, zmíněného otce, a je to příběh o tom, proč se nevrátil z války. Je to válečná historka plná nevýslovně statečných činů a magie. Zkrátka, jako obvykle, boží.
This one is... interesting. Dark, a bit gruesome. I liked being able to see into the life of Jack Greenwing (the father of the protagonist in the Greenwing & Dart series) and this little novella definitely kept me on my toes wondering what would happen next. It wouldn't much stand on its own, not that I mind that - but it's definitely a cliffhanger. Not my favorite story set in this series, then? Worth reading the once, though I doubt I'll ever come back to it.
realmente, não foi por nada que o jemis defendeu o pai dele a unhas e dentes, meu deus
"Not while Jack could still draw breath, not while Jack could still fight. He did not have the Sun Banner in his hand, but he held the sun in heart, the Sun-on-Earth had given him the Heart of Glory, and he would not fail."
This was a decent adventure story that fleshes out what really happened to Jemis Greenwing's father. It ends in a cliffhanger, though you more or less know the final outcome, if not the details, if you read Stargazy Pie first. I wouldn't recommend reading this without having done so.
I was hoping we’d see something about what happened after he defended the gate, after reading Plum Duff, but the story, while intense, only goes to his heroic last stand at the gate. I guess the rest will come out in the story….
another three stars because this book says that it's solving the mystery of jemis's father (set up in stargazy pie) and it sort of ends at the most exciting bit of that mystery, which means that it's a pleasant addition to the series but not perhaps as satisfying as i wanted it to be
Gosh, these stories set outside the empire are unsettling. As others have mentioned with this one, I prefer my stories without torture. At least there's nothing too graphic. This is a small slice out of the middle of a story, which made it lack somewhat for being satisfying, though it's good as a character sketch. If you're a fan of this series, you know you're going to read it anyway, go ahead.
An enjoyable, though very short novella set in this world. You do need to have read at least the first book in the Greenwing + Dart series before this one but I wouldn't say it was required reading for the series as a whole.
Prequel with Jemis' dad Major Jack Greenwing on a scouting mission gone wrong. A new and interesting corner of the Nine Worlds with its own magic, plus action!
This was a rather pointless addition to the story of Jack Greenwing. Most of this has been told to is in other places, and it stops before the situation is resolved.