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"Exhilarating epic war of the gods fantasy"
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted November 21, 2004 on The Best Reviews
SummaryFollowing the triumphant success of her Kushiel series
(Kushiel's Dart, Kushiel's Chosen, Kushiel's Avatar),
Jacqueline Carey now turns her hand to another startling
fable, an epic tale of gods waging war in their bid to
control an entire universe and the mortals they use as
chess pieces in a most deadly game.
Once, the Seven Shapers dwelled in accord. First-born among
them was Haomane, Lord-of-Thought and with his brother and
sister gods, the Seven drew upon of the power of the Souma,
claimed a race of beings for their own and began Shaping
the world to their will.
But Haomane saw the ways of this new world and was
displeased. For in his younger brother Satoris, once called
the Sower, Haomane thought too prideful and in his gift,
the quickening of the flesh too freely to the races...and
to that of Man in particular. Haomane asked Satoris to
withdraw his Gift from Men but he refused. And so began the
Shapers' War.
Eons have passed. The war that ensued Sundered the very
world. Haomane and his siblings lay to one end of a vast
ocean unable to touch their creations, Satoris and the
races of the world on the other. Satoris has been broken
and left adrift among the peoples of the world and is
reviled, with most of the races believing that it was he
alone who caused the rift and depriving them of the balm of
the Seven. He sits in Darkhaven, controlling his own
dominion--seeking not victory but neither vengeance.
But still Haomane is not content. Through Haomane's
whispers in the minds and hearts of the races of the world
come a prophecy that if Satoris were defeated, the world
could be made whole and all would bask in the light of the
Souma again. And the few who stay by Satoris are viewed as
the ultimate evil. And so the races come together to defeat
Satoris, a being who helped engender them all but who is
caught in his elder brother's warp.
Strong storytelling with evocative, compelling, and
unforgettable characters, Banewrecker ultimately asks the
question:
If all that is considered good considers you evil, are you?
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