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Shadow of the Lords
 
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Shadow of the Lords [Hardcover]

Simon Levack
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Australia (Mar 2005)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0743239776
  • ISBN-13: 978-0743239776
  • Product Dimensions: 22.8 x 15.2 x 3.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,274,968 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Simon Levack
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Product Description

Synopsis

Mexico, 1517. The Aztec capital is awash with fear and rumours. A strange figure has been seen running through the streets. A man with the face of a serpent, his body covered with glittering green feathers: Quetzalcoatl - the Feathered Serpent - the most powerful of the Aztec gods. Yaotl, the Chief Minister's slave, has more important matters to worry about. Engaged in a desperate search for his son, he's on the run from his vengeful master, Lord Feathered-in-Black. If the Chief Minister catches him, Yaotl can expect a grisly fate. Attempting to escape his master's bloodthirsty warriors, Yaotl stumbles upon a dismembered, unrecognisable corpse. As he pieces together the clues as to who the dead man was and how he died, Yaotl finds himself drawn into an affair of greed, jealousy and lust among the ancient, secretive society of the feather workers, the Aztec's foremost craftsmen.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By J. Chippindale TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
This book is not everybody's cup of tea, but the subject matter appealed to me, as anything of a historical nature usually does. It akes place in Mexico, around 1517 and as the title suggests is a fictional tale about the Aztecs. Some of the names in the book take some getting your tongue around and this sometimes makes for continuity problems for the reader, but apart from that it is a pleasant read. I don't think it is ever going to win a literature prize, but then very few books do.

If you like books that take you away from the present day trouble and strife and into a type of sixteenth century whodunit in a foreign and exotic land then you will pass a few pleasant hours reading this book.
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Amazon.com:  4 reviews
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
An engrossing sequel 29 Nov 2005
By ilmk - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Levack returns us to the world of the Aztec a day after his compelling opener finished to find our much put upon and beaten slave sleuth, Yaotl, Nimble's father, stumbling around on a mission to locate the missing emperor's stolen raiment of Quetzalcoatl and find out who killed it's artist, Skinny. Under the ever threatening gaze of the psychotic Captain and Fox, lieutenant of Otomies, he manages to evade his minders and escape into the backwaters to carry out some proper investigating coming across Skinny's extended family who all seem slightly unhinged and prone to violence. Whilst talking to (and not getting many answers out of) Angy, the uncle to Crayfish who is the father of Marigold, who was wife to Idle, who was twin brother of Skinny, who was married to Butterfly (who's definitely got the psychotic abilities to gain a place in the Otomies) Yaotl finds himself framed for the subsequent murder of Idle, which he didn't commit and trying to track down the incarcerated Marigold.

Meanwhile, he's on the receiving end of the embittered and very angry, Lily , daughter of Kindly, whose policemen, Upright and Shield continue the theme of manhandling our hero.

To give him some respite his friend, Handy, and brother help him to some kind of reconciliation with his family, inadvertently send him to see Stammerer, priest in House of Tears, who holds the key to the whole thing and get him out of some serious scrapes as he recovers the stolen coat and eventually uncovers a deed so nefarious that's it's quite appalling.

It was only a matter of time before an enterprising author picked the Aztecs as a setting for murder mysteries and Levack has done an admirable job with his tongue-in-cheek beleaguered hero, Yaotl, who squirms his way round Tenochtitlan constantly receiving a beating for his pains. Given he's one of life's great survivors it's no surprise to find a very sharp mind that can pick through the inevitable political intrigue that comes with his lethal cases.

Levack prose is crisp, his characters brightly painted and always exasperated, his action clean and well drawn. Yaotl is a good addition to the ancient murder sleuth set and hopefully Levack will continue his stories about his wayward but always enterprising hero.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
excellent historical mystery 30 Sep 2006
By Harriet Klausner - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
In 1517 in Tenochtitlan, capital of the Aztec Empire, citizens are afraid as rumors abound of a sighting of a person running through the streets; the fear comes from his visage which is that of a snake and his sparkling green plumage that coats his body. Could the Feathered Serpent of God, Quetzalcoatl, be haunting the streets as a foretelling of impending doom? Or could Tezcatlipoca, the most feared God, have come as a final day reckoning?

Yaotl is a slave to the second most powerful person in the empire, Chief Minister, Chief Priest and Chief Justice Lord Feathered in Black. He is known for his merciless use of living examples; those who provide the slightest affront or disobey him are publicly dealt with so others learn. He ignores the apprehensive prattle of the end of days because Yaotl has a more personal problem; his cruel owner seeks the killer of the odious merchant Ocotl; the suspect is Yaotl's son, who has vanished. Yaotl knows that once Lord Feathered in Black makes the connection he is dead plus he is worried about his child so he investigates who dismembered the victim, seeks his offspring, avoids the apparent appearance of the God, and dodges the lethal belligerent warriors of his master while uncovering avarice amidst the feather artisans.

Though obviously a historical mystery, THE SHADOW OF THE LORDS is much more as the audience obtains a deep insightful look at the Aztec Empire in the early sixteenth century. Yaotl is a terrific amateur sleuth who seems to be in the wrong place at the wrong time, but has no choice as he follows the clues wherever they lead. Readers will appreciate this astonishingly well written exhilarating tale that is sure to obtain award nominations and make Simon Levack a sub-genre favorite (see DEMON OF THE AIR).

Harriet Klausner
A wily sixteenth-century "gumshoe" brings the Aztec Empire to life 8 May 2010
By Cathy G. Cole - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
First Line: "Listen!" my brother cried.

This is the second mystery featuring ex-priest and now wily slave, Yaotl, who lives in the sixteenth-century capital of the Aztec empire, Mexico-Tenochtitlan. This second book takes up right where the first, Demon of the Air, left off.

While investigating a death in order to protect his son, Yaotl learns that the god Quetzalcoatl has been seen staggering down the streets of the capital, in full-feathered splendor, and in no time at all he finds himself searching for answers in the elite section of the city that houses the feather workers.

Levack includes maps of the country and capital city, as well as explanations of the Aztec calendar and language to help readers, but after skimming over them, I found myself referring to the map of the city a time or two and that's all. What immersed me in this story is Levack's writing. I could easily picture myself walking the streets or sitting in a boat on one of the canals of Tenochtitlan. I could see the temples. When I looked at characters, I found my eyes starting with their hairstyles and working their way down. I watched workers put together dazzling examples of the feather workers' art. I was there piecing together clues with a crafty man named Yaotl who was trying, not only to protect his son, but protect himself from a beating... or worse.

Since Shadow of the Lords also ends with a cliffhanger and I have the third book in the series sitting on my shelves, I know I can look forward to meeting with Yaotl once again.

If you like to be taken to another time and another place completely alien to your own in order to solve a mystery, pick up an Aztec mystery by Simon Levack. Not only will you be entertained, but the author will leave you feeling you have an idea of what it may have been like to live in the Aztec Empire.
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