Long-dormant magical forces are moving again in Sartorias-deles. In a four volume arc beginning with A Sword Named Truth, a shaky alliance made among young rulers brought too early to their thrones survived a first foray, commanded by Siamis, the handsome young Norsundrian who was born four thousand years ago. e!
The world’s mages know it’s not the quiet of peace—it’s the stillness before the storm.
The sinister and elusive Norsundrian commander Detlev has been seen more often in the past five years than he has in the past five hundred. The young allies discover that the alliance has been infiltrated by a mirror alliance of Norsundrian boys.
Trained by Detlev.
Which leads inexorably to the deadliest of stalking games . . .
I am a writer,( Patreon here) but I'm on Goodreads to talk about books, as I've been a passionate reader as long as I've been a writer--since early childhood.
I'm not going to rate books--there are too many variables. I'd rather talk about the reading experience. My 'reviews' of my books are confined to the writing process.
This is the last of the Rise of the Alliance arc. The first draft I finished in 1968, when I was in high school. It, unlike most of the other 300+ page tomes that are interconnected, was barely fifty pages, because I understood so little of what was going on.
What happened in the decades after is that my perspective shifted from the kids on the verge of adulthood to the adults. It was like the sun coming up over a vague landscape lighting up everything I'd missed. I do not recommend this kind of process--we just don't get to live long enough for books to take thirty, forty, fifty years to write and revise. It's a stupid process.
But I'm stuck with what I've got.
Anyway, this goes about as dark as I ever get. Pret-ty dark. But it also begins, obliquely, (or so it seems to me--the reader will have to decide) a redemptive jubilation that--eh, best to stop blathering.
The way this series encompasses everything Sherwood has ever written in this world and ties it all together is like a high wire act over a volcano during a rain of sharks. At times it is astounding that it happens at all, much less that it is so incredibly well done.
There are layers of enjoyment with this series. Smith started writing these stories at around the age of 8 (the 1960s?), and as a teenager. She is still writing stories set in this universe about these people as of 2024.
The entire series, read in chronological order, comprises books written by Smith as an adult, adult Smith working off brief stuff written as a kid, and stories written by 8 year old and then teenager smith, and then back by adult smith.
I started with the book Inda, which she published in 2006, as a very accomplished writer. I was sucked right in, and gobbled that series up within days.
As a middle aged person, it is fine to skip the books written by the kid/teenager. It was an interesting visit by me into the kid/teenager worldview - books written by a kid, for readers just like her. Later books advert to things that happen in the earlier books, but the reader is ably filled in. The books written by kid and teenager Smith have little character development.
I suspect that the kid/teenager books might be spectacular reads for kid/teenager girls though.
Having said all that, it is fascinating to enjoy a universe initially created by an 8 year old, and continuously filled in by the teenager and then adult author. There are a bunch of people who do a magic spell to keep them young as they don't want to grow up (grown ups are bad!) and don't want to be messed around by Love Stuff. You can see a girl/teen in the 60s looking at the social expectations/options for women of that time and thinking "ugh, no". There is also all the magic to take care of housework. See previous sentence.
With respect to the rest of this series, I will be reading a little more cautiously, checking out the publication dates, how much is the kid/teen written story and character arcs to see whether I am going to read them or not. If other readers really enjoyed being a kid, they may really enjoy these stories? Because it might recall them to their happy little kid brain?
THIS ACTUAL BOOK
So in this "Rise of the alliance" books, the sensibility is that of the adult author. The events take place all over the world, with a large cast. Events progress! Characters grow and learn from lived experience!
The rise of the alliance is one long and enjoyable narrative, carved into thick book sized chunks. I'm unable to think of or discuss these books as separate items.
This 700 page instalment is excellent.
My reactions to this chunk were as follows: "....what? ...wait. ... what? ...WHAT? WTAF? ...what?"
All in all a very enjoyable pause in this ongoing saga.
Contains: a smattering of language (one use of f-word), some violence/fighting, veiled references to sexual assault, one scene of aggravated sexual assault (not explicit and very tastefully written).
This marks the end of the young allies (as many are putting off the child spell) and in a way serves a a bridge between what was and what will be. It foreshadows the coming Norsunder war and gets all the chess pieces in place for that. There is a lot of discussion of good vs evil and whether retaliation is justified or if it makes us just like them. This takes place over several years and in a couple worlds so there is a lot going on; however, Smith is such a masterful writer that each story line is a treasure to read.
Worth it to see some plotlines resolved, but the same issues as prior books in this series. I hope the next books are more focused on moving the plot forward and connecting to characters.