This is the second book in a series, and I suppose this review is, in a way, a review of the series so far, but I read the first book back in the summer, so it's not as fresh in my mind.
The basics: epic fantasy, filled with political and personal scheming. Russell weaves a world rich in history, thick with mysterious magic, and peopled with wonderful characters. The plot, briefly, starts off apparently centered around two rival families who each wish to reunite and rule an ancient, shattered kingdom. Each family, though, is shattered by division. The Renne are divided by a plot against the family head, who some believe is not ruthless enough to lead the family. The rival Wills are split between the rightful head of the family, a blind man who gave leadership of the family to his brother, and the brother himself, who has allied the family with a power, malevolent sorceror. All this, however, is only the surface level of the story.
Magic in this world tends to be subtle, yet mythic in its proportions. It is largely mysterious, and not that often seen, and yet it pervades the fabric of the world. Throughout these two books we are shuttled back and forth between the lords of the realm, some of the common folk who have become embroiled in the struggles washing over the land, and larger-than-life characters out of this world's legends who return to shape this world's destiny. Like most "epic" fantasy, this wealth of characters is its strength and a danger. On the one hand, it allows the reader to view events that no one person sees, and also keeps the characters in perspective--they're not some sorts of demigods who are doing everything important, they're people struggling in the ways that people do. And Russell does a fantastic job with the characters. They are varied and detailed. There was a point in this book where I was reading a scene between two of the characters and I just said yes! this writer has it. It was just that the characters were so real, they were each unique and working to understand one another and achieve their own purposes and they just felt not only real, but as though the characters were driving the plot and not the other way around.
At the same time, the epic scope of the novels demands that you be willing to leave some characters for great lengths of time before you come back to them, and this raises some difficulties at times. Primarily, it was going from book to book, and I'll acknowledge that it probably had a lot to do with the time lapse in my reading, but with some many characters, it can become difficult to remember precisely who did what and who felt how and what sort of person so-and-so was the last time we saw him or her. I suppose this is really, though, just an argument not to wait to read the next book! And here's another fortunate circumstance: unlike some epic fantasists who have made their stories so large in scope that the tales range over book after book and you have to wait and wait and wait for the next one to come out and, as they often weigh in at 500+ pages each, it can be damned hard to follow what's going on and equally difficult to re-read; as I was saying, unlike such series, The Swan's War series is completed. It is a nice trilogy (Tolkien really set the gold standard, didn't he?), and it's done, finito, complete. In just under 4 years, too, which isn't bad for around 1500 of epic series. And it's been a good ride so far--now I'm off to start reading the final installment.