Coloring perfectly within the lines should be rewarded.
Jennifer Roberson isn't attempting to paint a masterpiece with "Karavans." The first of a four-volume series, of which three have been published, "Karavans" isn't huge-scale epic fantasy. But in writing a character-driven, compelling, mostly small-scale story, it's hard to see how she could have done better. Hence, a bump up to four stars.
"Karavans" has a good premise and takes a fairly simple but interesting story and makes us care. Nothing wrong with that. The hook: Alisanos is a forest populated by demons and gods and all sorts of beasties. But it is sentient, and it can move. It hasn't claimed new ground for 40 years, but that's about to change. This is a nice take on the ol' dark, evil forest tale.
While we're getting there (and it takes a long time for Alisanos to truly make its presence felt), Roberson delivers sharp (though not astonishing) writing, strong (though not incredible) world-building and interesting (though not terribly unusual) characters. The point is, this is well-done fantasy, provided you're not looking for colossal armies clashing and dark lords and such.
"Karavans" takes place primarily in Sancorra, a war-torn land recently overrun by the Hecari, a somewhat savage horde roughly akin to Native Americans. To keep order, the Hecari decimate their foes, in the true meaning of the term: culling one in 10. As the title suggests, there are "karavans," sort of gypsyish, I suppose, that cross the land in certain seasons. Diviners perform hand readings, fortune-tellings, if you will, on everyone who's part of the karavan, trying to ensure safe passage. This particular karavan is about to depart, with Davyn and his pregnant wife, Audrun, and their four children hooking up just in time. Roberson hops back and forth with third-person POV sections among this family, two mysterious Shoia guides (Shoia can die and return to life six times), the diviner Ilona, and others.
At first, this choppy approach — four pages or so centered on one character, then jumping to another — is off-putting, and it's hard to get a rhythm going. Once you get to know the cast, however, Roberson works wonders with a character-heavy plot that's generally short on action until a blast of a climax, and the movement from character to character actually works well. I noticed that one-third of the pages were gone before the karavan even had departed! That's not really a criticism. Roberson weaves her tale so skillfully that most readers won't mind the pace. Particularly effective are the portrayals of the two Shoia "cousins" Rhuan and Brodhi. Both have a mysterious connection to Alisanos, have some duties they are bound to perform among the humans, and are each accompanied by shape-changing demons with uncertain (but not entirely evil) goals.
Though I'd long been aware of Roberson's Cheysuli and Tiger and Del fantasy series, this is my first read of her. I was impressed; her under-the-radar sharp writing reminded me of Kate Elliott — 60 pages or so in, you start to realize this stuff is pretty clever. I wouldn't call "Karavans" high art, but it's smart art, efficiently made.