: disclaimer...this is not the kind of book I normally gravitate towards, and indeed it actually became a bit shopworn languishing on the bottom of my bedside pile, but as part of my resolte attempt to go beyond my habitual interests, this author came to my attention...
comparisons... this is a hero-in search- of himself quest that is broken up into 4 parts, although the whole story is a continuous,first person narrative. Our hero is Rodrigo, and while he could be compared to Don Quixote without his social consciousness, he is more Quixote rolled up with Sancho Panza into one haughty,obnoxious, anxiety ridden bundle of determination. There is also a strong comparison with AA Attanasio's Radix, in which the main character is so irritating as to encourage one to abandon him to his fate without bothering to carry on as witness. But then you are glad you stuck it out.
the story... When the Queen Elena dies without divulging all of her secrets,Prince Rodrigo is too young to assume her authority. Finding himself confined by his uncles regency and suspicious of his intentions, he sets about aquiring a retinue and eventually,his crown. Along the way to securing alliances, he has to face his inadaquacies and endure complete abasement and a dark night of the soul before he can find in himself the qualities of compassion, humility, courage and wisdom that he needs to be fit to rule.
the writing... intimate,easy,unpretentious, moving right along
with plenty of surprises,quite the pageturner
the subtext... the obvious subplot here is the magical element. It takes an even longer, more protracted process for Roddy to discover that the power is in the wielder, not the apparatus.
The more confusing subtext is the homo-eroticism that takes almost half the book to announce itself, only to fade into insignifigance as all events fall into perspective at the end. Themes explored here are fairly limited, mostly shame and necessity and their relation to love and fear and the development of trust and respect.
the confusion...There are 3 conditions that must be fulfilled before Roddy can assume his inheritance of Power. He must be crowned King, he must be a Virgin, and he must be True. okay with that. The confusion for me may be my inability to grasp the mindset that would dismiss the significance of homosexual experience, to the extent that Roddy is considered a virgin still, in that he has never had sex with a woman.
my reaction...okay, so I finally subdued my impatience with our prince, and began to applaud him for his honesty, audacity, tenacity and resilience. As a bit of a social klutz, I had a thing or two to learn as well.I would have liked this book even more if not for its trivialzation of homo-erotic experience and the occassional ludicrous assumptions that allow our hero to retain, in the end, his notions of hierarchy, modified as they are. I got the feeling there needs to be a sequel, and the promise of change will need some strong boosts to come into being.