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The Bone Palace (Necromancer Chronicles 2)
 
 
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The Bone Palace (Necromancer Chronicles 2) [Paperback]

Amanda Downum
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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The Bone Palace (Necromancer Chronicles 2) + The Drowning City (Necromancer Chronicles 1) + The Kingdoms Of Dust: The Necromancer Chronicles: Book Three
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Product details

  • Paperback: 480 pages
  • Publisher: Orbit (2 Dec 2010)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1841498157
  • ISBN-13: 978-1841498157
  • Product Dimensions: 10.9 x 17.8 x 3.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 374,256 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Amanda Downum
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Review

Spectacular . . . Finely drawn characters love and betray with enthralling passion and pain, and the taverns and gardens of plague-ridden Erisin and the titular ruined palace at its center make a dark and richly detailed background for this complex and bloody tale of sorcery, madness, and intrigue. (PUBLISHERS WEEKLY )

Absolutely outstanding. It's full of fantastic and original characters and a tightly coiled plot that pulls the reader along. Highly recommended both to fans of gritty secondary fantasy but also to those looking for something a little bit different, a little bit unusual, and a whole lot of awesome (ROMANTIC TIMES )

Book Description

A powerful adventure set in a mesmerising world of political intrigue, espionage and assassins.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By Stefan VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
I really liked Downum's debut novel, "The Drowning City", with its interesting takes on fantasy tropes, and the author's keen sense of location and evocative writing style. I particularly like the author's take on the supernatural, especially when mixed with the politics of the realm she has created. In "The Bone Palace", which is set a little after the events of "The Drowning City", we are taken back to the capital city, Erisín, into the midst of the aristocracy's machinations, and also into the dark world below.

"Two years and a half years ago she'd been sent to stir rebellion in the distant port city of Symir. The mission had ended in murder, chaos, and the near-destruction of the city - a success, as far as the Crown was concerned."

Downum offers a good look at both sides of society: the high class lives and intrigues of the wealthy and aristocratic families (sometimes deadly, but always polite) and the eternal games and schemes of those not occupying the throne; and also the grimmer and tougher world of the poor and lower-classes. Isyllt's investigation into the death of the prostitute gives us a glimpse of the harsh life of the denizens of `the Garden', Erisin's pleasure district, and introduces us to the various characters and groups of that world. The author paints a depressing picture of the lives and potential of those born into this world, and Isyllt's eventual concern for Dahlia is based on a desire to save just one person from a harsh life as a prostitute.

Savedra, the Crown Prince's mistress, conducts her own investigation into the vrykoloi and how they might be involved with her family. At first it's not entirely clear how Savedra's story will tie in to Isyllt's plotline, but in Part II of the novel, it becomes clear that they are somehow connected. Savedra joins with Ashlin (the Crown Prince's wife, who shares a surprisingly cordial relationship with her husband's concubine) to investigate a mysterious, mostly-unknown member of her family. Downum uses this second mystery to take the reader to other locations in the world she has created. The author does a great job of tying the two plot-lines together in the second and third part of the book, making the novel far more satisfying and the plot larger in scope. Indeed, Downum's pacing of the whole novel is very good - key plot lines are slowly unrolled for us, and the wider picture becomes visible only gradually, keeping us guessing about how the characters will develop and overcome the challenges they must confront and where the story is going.

The death-magic Downum has created for her world is great, and was one of the best elements in the first novel: It's gruesome, horrific, complex, and strangely captivating at the same time (I love vampires, so this necromantic-magic was bound to pique my interest). There's also the blood-magic, or `haematurgy' used by vampires and demons, which is also described with skill and originality. Unlike other novels published these days that have an undead flavour, Downum has played with the traditions of the genre, and for that she should be thanked. There are some recognisable influences, but Downum has added plenty of new and unusual twists and elements to her supernatural world to make this feel more original than many recent vampire/undead novels.

The vampires of the synopsis live in catacombs below the city, existing there with the full knowledge of the city's rulers as part of a long-ago truce of non-disturbance. The vampires can live there as long as they are "discreet", feeding off indigents and criminals but not the high-born or those connected to them. They're an interesting, more gothic/horrific take on the breed, though also highly intelligent. They're quite sinister in their way, but not brutal killers, and not particularly broody... (They remind me of White Wolf's Nosferatu and Warhammer's Nechrarchs - more demonic and horrific than the beguiling, beautiful, teenage-seducing vampires of today's vogue).

There are occasional, slower passages that don't quite have the same polish and assurance as the majority of the rest of the novel, but on the whole "The Bone Palace" is better than The Drowning City. Downum's prose flows well, with excellent description and atmospheric narrative - in fact, the author's gift for evoking atmosphere is both one of her greatest strengths, and also what can cause those slower moments I mentioned above (when the balance isn't quite right). She could be described as a less-confident Anne Rice, in this respect. In terms of the characterisation in the novel, I noticed a distinct lack of cliché and over-emoting, which kept the characters and their relationships interesting and realistic. I found myself hooked by the story, and sunk into the plot easily and quickly each time I picked up the book. If I hadn't been so busy this past week, I have no doubt I would have finished this in just a couple of long, into-the-wee-hours sittings.

While I really liked "The Drowning City", I got sucked into the story of this second novel much quicker. Downum's writing is more assured, her characterisation more interesting and developed, and the plot is as interesting and well-executed as the debut.

Horror, fantasy and detective elements are woven together skilfully to make this a very enjoyable and original read. Amanda Downum is definitely one of the best new authors writing in fantasy, and is an author to watch. If you like your fantasy dark and gothic, with some interesting new takes on some classic fantasy tropes, this is a highly recommended must-read.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By Gareth Wilson - Falcata Times Blog TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
Whilst I originally had problems with the first novel in this series (The Drowning City) I had high hopes that the author would learn from the errors of the first. In short, the lack of characterisation in a world that had obviously had a huge amount of time and attention lavished upon its construction.

Here in this title, Amanda has gone back and done her homework to create a more likeable character as well as to allow the reader the chance to revist her world a few years after the original is set. The dialogue is pretty good, the characters a hell of a lot better than their original outing and to be honest its gone to show that Amanda is an author who learns from past errors and picks herself up, looks at the problems and fixes them in later offerings. Definitely a shining star in the making and one that I really will look forward to reading in her next outing. Overall this is a title that is a lot more accomplished for the reader to enjoy and one that will leave them clamouring for more. A great title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  13 reviews
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful
the city built on bones 12 Dec 2010
By Eleanor Skinner - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Mass Market Paperback
I didn't get into Amanda Downum's first book, The Drowning City (Necromancer Chronicles, Bk 1), the first time I tried it. I loved her second, The Bone Palace, from the moment I picked it up. I think part of the difference is the setting. Bone Palace opens in Isyllt-the-protagonist's home city of Erisín, child of the archetype of Ancient, Elaborate, Secret-Filled City along with Tai-tastigon, Mélusine, London, and New York City. This is possibly my favourite fantasy setting ever, and also affords Downum an emotional advantage. In Drowning City, Isyllt enters as a stranger with 2 bodyguards, entering a new place, whereas Bone Palace opens with emotion-filled operatic drama, as Isyllt's home ground affords her tons of messy, decades-long emotional involvements to fascinate and draw the reader in. Isyllt is a necromancer, the protegé and former lover of the king's spymaster Kiril, a civil servant who investigates murders and has souls trapped or at home in her dark diamond ring. When an anonymous prostitute is murdered, Isyllt investigates, and continues investigating after others are satisfied, not out of a sense of honour - as she says later in the book, honour is often directly opposed to expediency - but out of a need for self-respect, a probable mix of curiosity and conspiracy instinct, and I think a submerged wish for justice for young, indigent, immigrant women such as she once was.

Besides its rich setting and vivid, complex relationships, the novel is an example of what progressive writers are trying to do that works. There are characters of many races (the most common being brown-skinned, although Isyllt is a white northerner), hetero, bi, and homosexual characters, trans characters, intersexual characters, and all of it is absorbed into the complex setting and none of it seems out of place. There are also many, many women characters, which at one point looked odd to me for a moment (as 4 female characters physically adventured their way to a female sorcerer's lair) but then I thought, how many fantasy novels have exactly the same gender ratio, only with males being more common? If you count the king as a significant presence, Bone Palace has 5 major male characters (Mathiros, Kiril, Varis, Nikos, Spider) and 2 prominent male minor characters (Ciaran and Mekaran). If there are also 5 major female characters (Isyllt, Savedra, Ashlin, Phaedra, Khelséa) and 6 prominent female minor characters (Captain Denaris, Azarné, Forsythia, Tenebris, Nadesda, Ginevra) - why not? It's a question not enough authors successfully ask.

One possible flaw I did find in the book is I'm not sure it has enough tragedy... I was expecting more characters to die/stop existing in the living world, leaving desolated characters, whereas Isyllt and others end up desolated mainly by tragedic relationships. I haven't decided whether this works or not yet.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
An excellent fantasy. 6 Feb 2011
By Matthew Jude Brown - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is a wonderful sophomore work from Amanda Downum, a fairly new name who, by the evidence here, is an author to watch. It's especially nice to see that it's better than her good previous novel, The Drowning City. The two make the beginnings of a loosely connected series, The Necromancer Chronicles, but there's absolutely no need to read the previous book first; only one on-page character, Isyllt, carries over, and no knowledge of what happens is required; everything gets explained again here. Even better, this one doesn't really spoil the previous work, either, aside from the protagonist's survival to turn up here.

The plot has aspects of the mystery, and begins with the discovery by the police of a dead prostitute with a royal ring sewn into her clothing and vampire bites on her body. Isyllt, a necromancer and investigator for the Crown, suspects reasons more complex than the typical, and so it proves. During the course of her inquiries, she talks to the Crown Prince, who in turn tells his wife and mistress; it's the latter, Savedra, who becomes the second major viewpoint character as she independently investigates the mystery from a completely different direction.

The characterization here is the best part; both Isyllt and Savedra are fascinating viewpoints with very different inner voices and insights into the world they inhabit. Isyllt is just the kind of driven, stubborn, insufficiently-concerned-about-self-preservation woman that a plot like this needs to advance. Her life is one that's gone off course, and there's not that much she can do about it; she needs a purpose, and finds one, and hangs onto it like a terrier until she's done. Her flaws are organic to her character, and nicely done.

Savedra is the best treatment of a transsexual in fantasy that I've read, and Downum avoids making it an easy matter of magical transformation; it rings much truer for that. Savedra's nature is also surprisingly, happily angst-free; sure, she wishes she was more accepted, but her family and her Prince love her, and the things she's worried about don't include her transsexuality. Rather, it's the assassins, the plots and the deadly politics that surround her inescapably. It's a good thing she was brought up in that world, and learned to survive and thrive in it.

It's a fast-paced book, and there's always something going on, so it's very suited to those with little patience for wordy fantasy. My only complaint, really, is that I could have read so much more of these characters. I was disappointed to reach the end.

I think this would work well for someone used to the so-called "paranormal romance" genre (paranormal urban fantasy with some romantic elements, in most cases, but I digress) ; it has a similar dark feel to most of them, a similar focus on the relationships between people, and it's paced similarly.

Overall, a very strong recommendation from me. Very readable, very fun, deliciously dark, and a set of characters I like a lot. What's not to love?
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Good adventure 17 Jan 2011
By Erik_L - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
The Bone Palace is a well written romp through the underbelly of a classic medieval metropolitan city. The death of a prostitute leads Isyllt, a necromancer/investigator for the crown, on a fascinating adventure through the bars, sewers, and castles of the capital city of Erisin. I was unaware this was the second in a series until I was well into the 22 chapters. Along the way, we encounter vampires, ghosts, mages, and other interesting folk. There is reference to what I now assume to be references to the first book, but this novel is very enjoyable as a standalone story if you are accustomed to fantasy terms.
My complaints for the book are two. First off, Ms. Downum appears to be a lover of crosswords, because the complex words are too long to fit on a scrabble board. The dictionary feature of the Kindle was put to a lot of use during the reading of The Bone Palace. I am not sure why the author seems to think it necessary to use such complex terms, but I found it interesting as well as annoying. Second, there is a large cast of characters to figure out. Some are street people, some are royalty, and some are a bit of both. It took a while to straighten them out.
Bottom line, a very good book if you're accustomed to reading fantasy novels with odd names and terminology and you have a love of expanding your vocabulary. I look forward to reading The Drowning City, and look forward to the next novel.
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