Bastard’s Eve is a night of celebration for most residents in the canal city of Lodi -- but not for sorcerer Learned Penric and his Temple demon Desdemona, who find themselves caught up in the affairs of a shiplost madman, a dangerous ascendant demon, and a very unexpected saint of the fifth god. This novella falls between “Penric’s Fox” and “Penric’s Mission” in the internal chronology of the Penric & Desdemona tales.
Lois McMaster Bujold was born in 1949, the daughter of an engineering professor at Ohio State University, from whom she picked up her early interest in science fiction. She now lives in Minneapolis, and has two grown children.
Her fantasy from HarperCollins includes the award-winning Chalion series and the Sharing Knife tetralogy; her science fiction from Baen Books features the perennially bestselling Vorkosigan Saga. Her work has been translated into over twenty languages.
Questions regarding foreign rights, film/tv subrights, and other business matters should be directed to Spectrum Literary Agency, spectrumliteraryagency.com
A listing of her awards and nominations may be seen here:
I allowed myself another dip into this wonderful series - I am rationing them now because there are only four left.
In Masquerade in Lodi Penric the sorcerer and Desdemona, his demon, are visiting Lodi. It is Bastard's Eve and the residents are celebrating but Pen and Des spend most of the time in the company of a saint, trying to find a lost merchant who has been possessed by a dangerous demon.
A lot happens in this short book as they rush around the city trying to find their target. When they eventually do so there follows a lot of fighting and a visit from a god. I loved every bit of it as usual - the humour, the world building, the beautiful writing and the great story. I wonder how long I can hang out before I read the next one.
Squeeeee! I have lost all semblance of objectivity when it comes to these novellas. Bujold always delivers a wonderful mix of mystery, adventure, and theology; all balanced with a clear and compassionate view of the humans involved. I always come away feeling comforted.
ETA 3 Jan 2022: Just re-read, because my hardback copy finally arrived.
I loved it, again! A fine way to 'read in' the new year.
Desdemona is once again bored as her host, Penric, is spending too much time in an office, translating diplomatic letters for his new sponsor.
Busy work, sniffed Des. Make-work. A waste of our talents.
Penric is grateful to have exchanged the pervasive cold of Martensbridge for the humid, warm air of Lodi – a wonderful city of canals , palaces, commerce and gondolas in a lagoon. [I’ll give you three guesses for the source of inspiration in this]. The young temple sorcerer would welcome some peaceful interlude, after his career as a demonic healer in Martensbridge ended abruptly with mental burnout and depression. ( “A serious mismatch between soul and calling. Serious mismatch. It broke something.” ) . Des thinks her master needs something else to occupy his mind and keep him from brooding on that almost fatal failure. The case of a young man found almost dead and with his mind wandering in the middle of the sea seems like a good opportunity for both of them to escape the confines of the letter office.
As a creature of pure spirit, a demon requires a body of matter to support it in the world of matter.
Penric and Des realize as soon as they visit the young man in hospital that he is tormented by a demon he picked up while drowning. The demon itself is in an even sorrier state than its host after a series of failed or brutally interrupted ‘imprintings’. The chances of recovering either the man or the deranged spirit are extremely thin, and Penric needs assistance from a trained exorcist for this. In his religious order, a part of the Five Gods system prevalent across most countries, this would be the Bastard’s Saint for Lodi and environs. To his embarrassed surprise, Penric finds out that his needed Saint is Chio - a teenage girl from the Order’s house for orphans - and that she will also welcome a chance to evade from the careful eye of her Guardian and spend a night of adventure in Lodi.
“They give us great gifts, if they can be educated, and treated with understanding and respect. Like any other complicated thing of power and danger, which can kill you if misused. A water mill, a sailing ship, a hunting dog, a forge, a foundry – a human being. A pity and a waste when they are ruined.”
Penric and Chio return together to Lodi to find out that the young man has escaped from hospital and is wandering around city, on the eve of Festival Night, driven by a mad demon. Their quest becomes urgent both from the danger of the demon gaining ascendancy over its host and from what appears to be third parties interested in the young man and his mysterious accident at sea.
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I’ve read this episode out of order, but it doesn’t really matter. The Lodi interlude helps clarify the reasons Penric left Martensbridge and introduces the reader to the wandering from place to place period of the temple sorcerer. It is a great opportunity for the author to expand the world with new vistas and new cultural references and to explore variations on the previous three plot schemes that relied heavily on the murder investigation template. While there is a criminal investigation of sorts still present here, the true focus is the relationship between hosts and demons and the role the Gods play as arbiters of this symbiotic cohabitation. Strong characterization and moral quandaries have always been a feature of Lois McMaster Bujold writing, well supported even in this shorter form by lively action, clear exposition and a wicked sense of humour.
Pen tried not to let his mind be diverted by the picture of a demonic chicken.
To me, and probably to other hundreds of hardcore fantasy fans, this is a clear Easter Egg and a reference to an infamous scene from Terry Goodkind’s “Sword of Truth” series. Penric’s continuous troubles in controlling either Desdemona or the young women he meets during his adventures when it comes to feminist points of view is another source of amusement, something that will soon come to a head in the next three episodes in the series (which I have already finished). For my conclusion of this excellent addition to a fascinating series, I will quote once again Desdemona, the multiple-personality demon, as she sighs with fond exasperation:
‘Have I mentioned I actually like your overactive imagination?’
Going to be honest, this feels like a bit of a dud compared to the previous novellas, especially the magnificent Orphans of Raspay. Still not *bad* (it's Bujold), but the central problem doesn't feel quite as pressing or the antagonists quite as dangerous.
i think i’m in love with Penric kin Jurald. i mean look at him on this cover—he’s so lovely. a nerd and a sweetheart. the only blond man to deserve human rights since Legolas Greenleaf.
it’s very funny when people do devious, evil things and only manage to amount to annoyances to him. both his traveling companions disappear at one point in an obviously nefarious turn of events, and Penric’s like ugh, i just bought us all kebabs tho. actually, i’m gonna eat all three now. as revenge. and he was sooo miffed when a guy stabbed him near the end, even though he can heal himself.
it’s also clear in this story that he’s been quietly but profoundly changed by grief, and yet he remains as unfailingly empathetic to others as ever. i’m a little sad we didn’t get to hear if anything came of his study abroad year with the shamans, and i’m VERY sad about what he went through in the intervening years since. medical trauma is so real; i am holding his hand in that.
I found this novella to be a bit less interesting than the previous ones. However, the author's writing is as good as usual, there's not anything to criticise stylistically.
The novella expands our previous knowledge of the festivities that are organised for the five gods and introduces a new location, the capital of Adria, Lodi, which is heavily inspired by Venice. I really enjoyed the many female side characters that were part of the story. The relationship between Penric and Choi is also very interesting, with Penric providing friendly empowerment to Choi while at the same time underestimating her mental stability and life experience despite being much younger than Pen.
As opposed to the generally fast paced, dramatic, and character-driven tales of Penric and Desdemona, this story is boring and plot-less. This should be a tale of recovery from Penric's near suicide. It should offer us a view of his growing friendship with his demon, not a short, meandering search in a boring town for a, frankly, boring demon. None of the characters were well drawn or deep. The demon ridden man was inconsequential. The saint, meh. If the author is simply cranking these stories out mechanically, I'm out.
Shows us a previously unknown time in Penric's life filling in some of the unknowns in both the world building and his journey. I love how Bujold has embraced self publishing e-novellas; there are nine in this series now and the journey as a whole is delightful.
Takes place over a night in Lodi (Bastard’s Eve) in Midsummer, as Penric and Des and Blessed Chio search for a young man ridden by a demon. After much wandering around Pen and Chio find the young man just in time. Really fun.
Penric, and his demon, Desdemona, are still relatively new in the canal city and seaport of Lodi, and his position as Archdivine Ogial's court sorcerer. When Penric is called to the Gift of the Sea charity hospice for sailors to see a "poor mad fellow" fished out of the sea by a fishing ship, whose problem might be of the supernatural kind, he finds, indeed, that the young man is demon-ridden.
While Penric is in the hospice physician's office discussing how how quickly they can get a Saint of the Bastard there to relieve the unidentified young man of his demon, the young man and the demon, alarmed by the visit from Penric and Desdemona, escape from the hospice. This makes a relatively simple, if unpleasant, task far more difficult. It's seemingly a good development when a woman and another young man show up--the demon-ridden young man's mother, and a friend, who was a shipmate on the ship the demon-ridden fell overboard from. More eyes, someone who can join the search knowing where in Lodi the young man, at least, might think to hide, etc. Penric also learns where to find the Bastard's Saint in Lodi. She's a young woman who grew up in the Bastard's orphanage on the Isle of Gulls, and still resides there.
The fact that all this has happened on Bastard's Eve, a night of revelry and partying in the streets, and a day and night Penric might reasonably have expected to have off, does not make things easier for him, or indeed for the Saint, Chio, whose birthday is officially Bastard's Day. Though truthfully, in addition to doing her job as the Saint, she's rather pleased to be able to get out on the town on Bastard's Eve, with less strict chaperonage than the orphanage would normally have allowed.
What follows has Penric and Chio learning new things about Lodi, the demon they're chasing, how Saints and sorcerers can work in relatively close proximity to each other (too close, and Desdemona would rather hide), and about that helpful young man who wants to help find and rescue his friend. And who may have an interest in the demon-ridden young man's sister.
It's a great little adventure, and a visit with Penric and Desdemona. Recommended.
Another great entry in the Penric and Desdemona series.
This one takes place quite a few years after Penric's Fox. Penric is now in his late 20's and in Lodi (a city akin to Venice) working as a translator. As he goes out to celebrate the Bastard's Holiday, he learns of a crazed man who has been rescued out of the water and is being treated at the hospital.
The doctors believe he could be possessed, so Pen and Des are brought in to check him out. Before they can, however, the man escapes. The rest of the novel involves the mystery of finding the man, figuring out who he is, and what happened to him.
It's another charming little mystery that grows not only the characters of Pen and Des, but also this world.
For the first time since he faced down a Saint to beg permission for Desdemona to remain in the mortal realm, Penric has to work closely with a Saint once again. On the eve of Bastard's Day in the canal city of Lodi a man with a manic, ascendant demon is on the loose. Penric must find him, before the chaos of demon magic spirals completely out of control. This is a short one even for this novella series but I enjoyed it a lot as a carnival romp.
On Bastard’s Eve at Lodi, Pen, Des and the Blessed Chio must locate a missing young man whom, it is discovered, is unexpectedly ridden by a demon. Pen and Chio talk of much while wandering around, and thankfully, manage to rescue the man in more than one way.
Again, Bujold delivers a compassionate, comforting, and entertaining tale.
I figured out the mystery aspect fairly early on in the story, but that did not detract from my overall enjoyment of the book. I'm enjoying spending a little more time in this world with its bite-sized novellas after finishing a very long audiobook.
Plot: Sorcerer-priest and ride along demon accompanies a teenaged-girl demon-eater to go and hunt down a possessed man in fantasy Venice-ish.
1. I have to admit, I'm a little disappointed this book is set earlier in Penric's life, without his entire set of gloriously weird and hypercompetent in-laws getting in on the act. But it's still Pen and Des and Bujold, Chio was an absolute delight, and so were Iserne and Ree. Most Penric books leave me longing for more stories about the supporting characters, and this was not an exception.
2. I LOVE the entire universe of the World of the Five gods so much? The theological system is so simple, and you still get so much mileage out of it. Every bit of expanded lore is just makes it feel richer and more lifelike. I now badly need to know what happens in Lodi to make it home to so many saints. Do they like, import them? Is it because this is set a century and a half (more?) before Curse of Chalion and saints have become less common over the decades? Is it early installment weirdness or Chalion maybe just doesn't have saints because of the Curse? I WANT TO KNOW.
3. The story is a pretty standard combination exploration of new setting, minor not-quite-murder mystery, and world-building expansion. It's still a fun read, mostly because Bujold is physically incapable of sketching out characters without imbuing every individual one with enough personality to drive an entire novella forward. I usually go into paroxyms of joy because her writing has zero purple prose and all the emotional weight of a meteor slamming into your head. Just-ugh.
4. Bonus points for a random guy mentioning what a pretty, pretty boy Penric is. Because I am the most basic of bitches and this is something that I hope for every time I hear a new Pen & Des book is out.
The first half of Masquerade in Lodi trends towards one of the better Penric novellas, with a great mystery setup in a Venice-alike during the heart of a celebration... unfortunately it's all over too soon. The twist isn't well set up enough to be poignant, and when it comes, it basically leaves a full third of the story to wrapping things up. It's nice to get a good denouement, even in a short story, but in this case it comes off as wrapping things up too neatly and ensuring we got all the details. Penric in particular is made more daft than usual in order to have characters explain things to him and.... eh? It's fine.
5 stars just for the joy of getting to spend a little more time with Penric and Des, this time in the Venice-inspired city of Lodi. We meet a young saint, brave danger, and solve a mystery. It's a lovely world to visit, and a perfect escape!
3.5 Stars a definitely solid tale in the ongoing saga of Penric and Desdemona
I really enjoyed this one after the last two entries left me a little unsatisfied. Penric and Desdemona's back and forth and enjoyable banter are what make this series so enjoyable and this fun mystery murder was a delight. While I am hoping that some of these entries can get a little more depth with character, the structure is endlessly readable and pleasant to follow. On to Penric's Mission!
I've loved all the Penric novellas so I was surprised when I realised that it wasn't quite grabbing me and it was taking me me quite a while to finish. Not sure why exactly - maybe it's a timing issue, or maybe it's just me. But it did come together nicely two-thirds of the way through, and of course it is Penric and Des, so it still gets the thumbs up from me, but this is my least favourite Penric so far.
I liked this a lot. It was a fun little adventure with a happy ending. I liked the new characters we met and would not mind seeing them again. We get to see a 29 year old Penric at his new position in Lodi after leaving Martinsbridge. Lodi is a new city we’ve not seen yet and was an interesting setting.
This latest story in the Penric & Desdemona series fits in as book #4, even though there are other stories that have already been written that are chronologically set later. I love this series.
While the story can be read on its own, I strongly recommend starting at the start.
Penric, whose adventures have featured in this novella series since its beginning in Penric’s Demon, is a fascinating character. Or perhaps that should be characters. And that is part of the fascination.
Because Penric was knocked sideways out of the life he planned to lead by the advent of Desdemona in his life, and there his adventures definitely began.
That sounds like a romance, doesn’t it? But that’s not what this is. Not at all. Not that Penric doesn’t have his own romantic adventures, and not that Desdemona didn’t have hers. Two centuries worth of them.
In the World of the Five Gods, those five gods are not just worshipped. They are real, can appear before their followers, and can act directly upon the world. But mostly they act indirectly, through their priests, their learned divines, of which Penric is one, and their god- or goddess- touched Saints, one of whom is featured in this entry in the series.
Those gods are the Mother, the Father, the Sister, the Brother and the fifth god whom Penric serves, the “master of all disasters out of season”.
Penric is a Learned Divine of the White God, the Lord Bastard. Desdemona is the demon who shares Penric’s head. They are partners. He provides the physical body which allows her to move in the world, and she gives him magic. And the benefit of her two centuries of experience – sometimes whether he wants it or not. From Penric’s perspective it’s often like have a dozen older sisters and aunts giving him advice whether he’s asked for it or not. Generally not.
The series began when Desdemona jumped from her previous host, the dying Learned Divine Ruschia, to young Penric, knocking his life into another channel from the one he was expected to have as the younger son of a prosperous landowner.
He also expected to be bored out of his skull, but life with Desdemona inside his skull has been anything but boring. Often dangerous, occasionally life-threatening, but never, ever dull.
In Masquerade in Lodi, Penric is definitely not bored. Tired, footsore, terrified and manipulated, occasionally all at the same time, but never, ever bored.
Even if the story begins by his thwarted attempt to take a half-day off in preparation for the local festival in honor of his god. But then, the Lord Bastard is the god of misfortune and bad luck, along with prostitutes, executioners and vermin.
And Penric runs into pretty much all of the above as he attempts to squire a very young Saint of his order along on a mission to find a demon-touched man who may or may not be either a murderer or a potential victim. Or both.
Whether he is saint or villain, the young man’s mother is still expecting him to come home. It’s up to Penric, with the help and sometimes hindrance of the saint, to make it happen.
Escape Rating B+: The beginning of Masquerade in Lodi may be a bit confusing for faithful readers of this series. The book published immediately before this one, The Physicians of Vilnoc, takes place several years and a whole lot of life and adventures after Masquerade in Lodi. Some fairly dangerous and rather significant adventures, including Penric’s marriage.
Those events are still in Penric’s future in Lodi, and it takes a bit of a reset to get one’s reading self back on track. A worthwhile mental adjustment, but definitely an adjustment. The book whose events immediately precede this one is Penric’s Fox, and that was several books ago.
On my oft-cited other hand, one of the things that this entry in the series does very well, is to not just tell its adventure but also to show and not tell a whole lot more about how the system works.
By that I mean the system of gods, temples, demons, saints and worship. Because this religion functions for the actual good of its people, which is rare in fantasy. Usually the “church” is a source of evil or oppression or corruption or villainy or all of the above. Not in the World of the Five Gods.
So when Penric is called to the dockside mission to investigate the case of a man who might be demon-touched or might merely be out of his own head, it’s normal and accepted and expected. When Penric discovers that the poor man is harboring an untamed demon, there are no torches and pitchforks. No signs of the “evil eye”.
Instead, there’s a process in place for Penric to take the poor man to a Saint of the White God to have the demon taken by the Lord Bastard. A process which the victim will survive.
Except, it’s not nearly that simple. Otherwise there wouldn’t be an adventure. But in the discussion between Penric, his demon Desdemona, all of the Temple officials who become part of the merry chase of the escaped victim, the young Saint who is occasionally god-touched but always way more observant and intelligent than anyone expects, we learn a wondrous amount of stuff about this world, how it works, and both Penric’s and his god’s place in it.
And we get a tour of friends and enemies in low places, because nothing about the victim, the demon, or the reason they met in the first place is remotely as it seems.
Discovering how everyone got to be in this pickle in the first place is all the fun.
I've read these last few Penric & Desdemona books (8-10) late and out of order, but with this one, I'm finally caught up. This one was another very solid entry. Like all of Bujold's long series, each story adds a little bit of richness to her characters which adds up to in turn make the whole series more than the sum of its parts.