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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Dark Blackmantle, 20 Jul 2005
As Patricia Kennealy-Morrison will tell anyone who listens, she once was briefly wed to Doors frontman Jim Morrison. But she rewrites her own love life in "Blackmantle," a messy and rather dizzying fantasy novel, which is too vengeful and wild to be enjoyable in its own right. Imagine her autobiography "Strange Days," but with a lot more murder. Athyn was born on a battlefield to a dying mystery woman, and was brought back home as a foundling by one of the surviving warriors. Years later, she is cast out of her family's home by her cruel foster brother, and goes on to become a legendary brehon. Then she discovers the shocking truth -- she is actually the hereditary queen of Keltia. During this time, she also falls in love with famed bard Morric Douglass. Eventually the two are married, as Athyn drives out the Firvolgi invaders. But the beautiful junkie Amzalsunëa is still obsessed with Morric, and poisons him when he comes to comfort her. Now Athyn goes on a rampage against anyone who wronged Morric -- and then goes into the underworld itself, to challenge the god of death. At first glance, "Blackmantle" sounds like a sci-fi version of the Orpheus legend. But it becomes clear after a short time that this is a therapy session put to paper, where Kennealy-Morrison can get revenge on all the people in her life who have ticked her off, then live happily ever after with an idealized, faithful Morrison. It gets a little stomach-turning, in more than one way. It certainly doesn't help that Athyn -- Kennealy-Morrison's glorified alter ego -- is such a nasty person. At one point, she skins and debones several men for trivial slights; she also hunts down and beheads Morric's ex-girlfriend, who is a parodic copy of Morrison's longtime girlfriend Pamela Courson. Not to mention the brutal racism toward the Incomers, whose sole flaw seems to be that they are not Kelts. By the last third of the book, it's hard not to wish that a meteor would crush Athyn. Kennealy-Morrison has an admittedly pretty style, with plenty of description and some truly interesting scene, particularly her vision of the Underworld. It does get a bit exaggerated in its faux-Celtic (faux-Keltic?) atmosphere at times. Unfortunately, it's bogged down by too much talking from Athyn, too much adoration of the plastic Morric, and too much sneering at the absurd parody of Courson. Reality and fantasy collide with a nasty splat in "Blackmantle." In the end, it seems merely like a way for Kennealy-Morrison to get back at Courson and the Doors in fiction, as she could not do in life.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Orpheus and Eurydice in Outer Space!, 29 Aug 1998
By A Customer
While others who have reviewed this volume have complained about the personal, autobiographical element, it is my opinion that they are totally off the mark. Though the author has admitted, indeed, even boasts of, the honor she grants to her beloved husband, and uses their story to fuel this book (hey, she's a writer; that's what writers do...), she has transcended the personal and accessed the archetypal themes of love, loss and loyalty, betrayal and vengance. Among the author's works, it is her personal favorite, and in her opinion "the best writing I have ever done." It's a pity some readers cannot see past the lesser autobiographical connection to the grandeur of the mythic sweep beyond. After all, don't you think she would've challenged the gods for Jim if she could have? (...and don't you think she might have won?)
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Blackmantle: A triumph indeed!, 19 Sep 1997
By A Customer
Would that we could all avenge our personal wrongs with as much style and finesse as Athyn Cahanagh!
In "Blackmantle", the latest installment of the popular and well-respected "Keltiad" series, writer Patricia Kennealy-Morrison introduces readers to Athyn Cahanagh, a war orphan who grows up to become a Keltic leader renowned (and at times feared) for her fair-mindedness and deep-rooted sense of justice. Kennealy-Morrison, famous for her development of strong female characters, does not fail her readers in bringing forth a protagonist who, while being very human and having faults of her own, is dedicated to doing what is right.
While regaling readers with a feast of fierce battles, wild magics, and the sheer beauty of Keltia, Kennealy-Morrison invites readers to explore a realm that is even more powerful--that of Athyn's relationship with master bard Morric Douglas.
Athyn and Morric's bond is mythic in its proportions. Sparks ignite at their first meeting, and the Underwolrd shakes when Blackmantle searches there for her murdered beloved. While some detractors may think that such scenes are, at best, uninteresting, or, at worst, emotional posturing, Kennealy-Morrison balances out the grand tableaus with moments of very human tenderness. The times Athyn and Morric spend alone, just being a couple in love, show off the writer's ability to create characters who know how to act like people.
Loyal readers of the Keltiad will enjoy "Blackmantle" thoroughly. Anyone who has an interest in Celtic mythology will come away very satisfied. New visitors to Kennealy-Morrison's universe will be pleasantly surprised that, yes, intelligent fantasies are still being written.
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