Home :: Books :: Science Fiction & Fantasy  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy

Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Shadow Sorceress (Spellsong Cycle, Book 4)

The Shadow Sorceress (Spellsong Cycle, Book 4)

List Price: $27.95
Your Price: $27.95
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Lather, Rinse, Repeat
Review: I am a long-term fan of Modesitt, having read his material from his earlist days. Unfortunately, this novel, while professionally written, is lacking on so many levels that it is difficult to finish.

Yes, Secca is developed as a character... Who is just like the character she replaces, only without the anguish of separation and the difficulty of adaptation.

And the world is still nominally the world that we left in Book 3, advanced somewhat in time, but it has broken down as an independent milieu and vaguely resembles Recluce down to the white ships of Sea-Priests, the building of a steam engine and some editorial errors referencing Recluce...

And we have the obligatory dull romance... Just like the dull romances found in most of Modesitt's books... Only this time, without a central character I cared for, I found it duller and more obviously contrived than in other series'.

If you're a fan of the series, good luck. But don't expect to blown away. This is far from his best work.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Lather, Rinse, Repeat
Review: I am a long-term fan of Modesitt, having read his material from his earlist days. Unfortunately, this novel, while professionally written, is lacking on so many levels that it is difficult to finish.

Yes, Secca is developed as a character... Who is just like the character she replaces, only without the anguish of separation and the difficulty of adaptation.

And the world is still nominally the world that we left in Book 3, advanced somewhat in time, but it has broken down as an independent milieu and vaguely resembles Recluce down to the white ships of Sea-Priests, the building of a steam engine and some editorial errors referencing Recluce...

And we have the obligatory dull romance... Just like the dull romances found in most of Modesitt's books... Only this time, without a central character I cared for, I found it duller and more obviously contrived than in other series'.

If you're a fan of the series, good luck. But don't expect to blown away. This is far from his best work.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: I still like the story, but Secca could have been characteri
Review: I wrestled over how many stars. The book was well written, but for those of us following the series, it just didn't fit right. For one thing, there was too much missing. We know that Anna's last campaign bought 20 years of peace to Defalk and that during that time she apparently had 10 good years with Jecks before he died, and she also had time to raise Secca, orphaned earlier in the series. But other than that, what happened to all the other people?

Now Anna has died. The powers that were held back peacefully because of fear of her are now unleashed. It is Secca's turn to fight the good fight.

One problem I had was Secca was too much a carbon copy of Anna. If we're going to get a new heroine, she needs to be her own person. For one thing, we all agreed that Anna was one-of-a-kind, and this spoils it!

I also expected Jimbob (aka Robero) would grow up a little more mature. Just like Secca had that realization "oh-oh, it's me in the driver's seat" I expected a similar realization from the heir of Defalk. Secca is running around from country to country putting her life and others' lives on the line on a daily basis, while Robero sits at home and plays king. I think in Secca's place, I would have defected half way thru the novel!

I would have been impressed if Secca discovered something new about sorcery, that got the impossible done quicker. Perhaps by going to Sturin. I actually expected her to start playing around with drums... maybe even dance. Possibly discovering a whole continent and new world with new problems, new trade potentials on the other side of that world.

Well, there's still Richina. I have hopes for Richina!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Too much credit? Not enough credit?
Review: It seems to me that what Modesitt has been engaged in during both the Spellsong Cycle and the Recluse Cycle are some extended meditations on different levels about the use of power. To this end, he uses fantasy settings and magic power to make his point.

_The Shadow Sorceress_ seems to underline this mission by abruptly removing the character to whom we had become attached in the first three books and replacing her with her young student. It's as though he's pointing out that it's the tapestry and not the thread that matters. The character encounters similar situations with a new set of powers and responsibilities and generally has to hold a complicated kingdom together to the best of her abilities.

Perhaps I'm giving Modesitt too much credit here, but it's difficult for me to believe that such an obviously talented writer could engage in such a blatent disregard for character and character development unless it were on purpose. Don't know.

On the other hand, there's the 'not enough credit' argument-- and it's a fair one to make. I've been complaining about the exact same points in all the books since book 1, and yet I'm still reading the darned things. I *like* character. I'm interested in Anna/Secca far more than I am in the fate of Defalk, but I tend to buy and read these as soon as they appear. I know of no current fantasy writer stronger than Modesitt in terms of his ability to make the details real and to make the writing compelling.

I'll keep reading, and probably keep complaining.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Highly repetitive story of magic, swordfighting and politics
Review: Modesitt's style has never been his strong point, but his storytelling skills are impressive. Unfortunately, while full of his usual elements--arguments, force, tense battles, exhausting travels, told at a fast pace--the individual stories have all been told before. The young Secca could just as easily be Anna of the earlier books, and her ever-multiplying enemies seem no different than Anna's in first three books. The male chauvinists still doubt a sorceress's deadliness, and countless enemies are characterized only by their enmity and ambition.

There is a minor but unexciting romantic subplot, and a more intersting moral opposition to using magic in warfare--where it can escalate to mass-destruction levels.

On the whole, if you've read the earlier Spellsong books, you'll find little new here. If not, start with _The Soprano Sorceress_.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: You have read this book already
Review: So far I haven't suspected the lack of imagination in the L. E., Jr. Modesitt, but after this book I begun to wonder. When I passed the middle of the book, I had to check that I hadn't taken one of the Recluce books by mistake. I mean, the similarities are too numerous to be accidental. The sorcerer and sorceress who fall in love, the watersprout that is created by Secca, the engine that the smith is trying to build (which is mentioned once for no apparent purpose) - all these elements are already familiar to anyone who read the Recluce series.
I also got the imperssion that to prolong the series, author is adding the elements that are not organic for these series, and they look foreign (for example all the line of the Ladies of the Shadow). In short, for me the book was a disappointment.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Fantasy
Review: Twenty years have passed since Anna was forcibly ripped away from her home in the Mist Worlds and sent to a beleaguered world that needed her singing abilities. In Liedwahr, singers are powerful sorcerers and Anna turned out to be the strongest, winning battle after battle until peace settled in the realm. Anna adopted Secca and taught her all she knew about sorcery.

When Anna died, a nation mourned, but Secca could not remain weeping long. An insurrection in a neighboring province needs to be stopped before anyone else thinks a power vacuum has occurred with Anna's death. In spite of her efforts, Secca has a gigantic workload ahead of her, including crushing a rebellion at several locales as the Sturinnn blockade needs breaking and the Nesera revolt needs halting, etc.

A new arc of the Spellsong Cycle begins starring a powerful but uncertain Sorceress-Protector who must follow her mentor-mother's incredible accomplishments. There is plenty of action with sword and sorcery battles even as the key characters are fully developed so their actions are understandable. THE SHADOW SORCERESS is a triumphant epic fantasy.

Harriet Klausner

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Where are the missing Lords of Defalk?
Review: You would have thought that after four books of the Spell Song Cycle that all of the 33 Lords of Defalk would have been identified by now. Well, you would be wrong. Missing, from the list at the front of the book, is the Vyarl, Rider of Heinene from the list in the Shadow Sorceress. Has he died? Is he still the Rider?

Is Alseta or Ytrude the Lady of Mossbach? The relationship between Kinor and Alseta, who are brother and sister, is not mentioned.

Who are the Ladies of Shadow? The Regent Anna buried a city, shouldn't they have made an appearance before 'The Shadow Sorceress'?

To me, Modestitt treats all his protaganists in the same manner, whether they are male or female. First they have things happen to them and then they remove all obstacles in their path.

I'd like to see more intrigue within the land of Defalk and some intelligent action from the Sturrinese. From their actions in the series, I find it impossible to reconcile statements to the effect that they always achieve what they set out to do.

A final bugbear - why do we have scores and companies of troops? This particular itch has been with me for 9 books of the Recluce series.

I think that the Shadow Sorceress would have benefitted from more characterisation of Secca. The last we "saw" of her she was 9 years old and "now" she's 31. Character development please!

Secca is the Lady of Flossbend, yet she is not mentioned as visiting throughout the book and she takes no troops from there on her expeditions, why not?

I do like the work of this author and this Cycle could be even better than Recluce. For that to happen the Sturrinese would have to act more intelligently than the Hamorians ever managed.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates