Amazon.co.uk Review
In
The Curse of Chalion Lois McMaster Bujold abandons her usual military space-opera for good reason; this is an emotionally powerful, inventively plotted novel which needs to be fantasy to work. Cazaril, betrayed by his enemies into a crippling two years in the galleys, returns to court a physical and emotional wreck: appointed secretary-tutor to the young princess Iselle, he finds himself in direct opposition to his powerful betrayers. His preparedness to make the ultimate sacrifice and save Iselle from an unwanted marriage to one of them by a death spell that will kill him also has unforeseen results; he learns the hard way that the gods have plans for him, ingenious and mischievous plans.
Bujold does charm very well--we share Cazaril's sheer joy at mentoring the bright snippy Iselle--and she is also good at physical and emotional pain--Cazaril's sense of himself as broken and worn-out is entirely convincing. This is also a fantasy which includes some inventive thinking about the nature of gods and the consequences of curses; there is a nasty-minded logic to almost everything that happens here. Bujold's fans will read it without recommendation; many readers who have resisted the Vorkosigan books will find this an attractive and intelligent fantasy. --Roz Kaveney
Review
"Fresh, intriguing, and as always from Lois McMaster Bujold, superb." Robert Jordan, New York Times best selling author of The Wheel of Time Series "Bujold continues to prove what marvels genius can create out of basic space operatics." Booklist "This is one of the great ones." Science Fiction Chronicle
Returning home to Cardegoss after escaping slavery in the galleys of the barbaric Roknari, Lupe dy Cazaril, soldier and former slave, is appointed tutor and secretary to the Royesse Iselle, sister to the heir to the throne. Caught up in a web of intrigue, he resorts to black magic - and finds himself an unwitting saint. Now only he can remove the eponymous curse that haunts the royal line. This is what might once have been called 'low fantasy'. In other words, its atmosphere is gritty and dark; the characters are largely flawed or unscrupulous. The trappings of romance are conspicuously absent: there are no magic swords, dragons, dark towers, non-human races or spectacular displays of supernatural power. What magic there is, is understated - spells are miraculous interventions by one of five gods (who form a celestial family of father, mother, son, daughter and bastard), rather than a species of heavy artillery. Instead, it is a fantasy of rare emotional sophistication and depth whose atmosphere is reminiscent of the earthy Elizabethan bleakness of King Lear (right down to some infelicitous uses of cod-Shakespearean prose - 'bethought himself', 'very heaven'). Cazaril himself is an unconventional but sympathetic hero. A fully adult man, scarred both physically and psychologically by his past, competent without being exceptional, he finds himself the unwilling host to a supernatural power. Bujold captures nicely his sense of being powerless but experienced, confused but still perceptive. It is a shame that the book lacks the sense of joyous energy imparted to Bujold's space-opera writing by her best creation, military genius Miles Vorkosigan; but then, this is a slower book, which aims for a different and more serious tone, and by and large succeeds admirably. (Kirkus UK)
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