(Mass Market Paperback)
Kyra was preparing for her final wizard test before the Council. But suddenly, something was twisting her magic, weaving sinister portents of doom into even the simplest of her spells. Then she knew for certain that her young sister Alix was soon to marryand soon to die. And so she journeyed back to the family who had disowned her. To save her sister, Kyra would have to face down her father's rage, stand firm against the venomous rivalries of her family's enemies, and confront the Inquisition. Then she must defeat a still deadlier foeif only she could find it!
The enchanting new fantasy in the Windrose Chronicles series--from the bestselling author of Dog Wizard. Studying at the Wizards' College, Kyra is stricken with terrifying dreams that her younger sister is doomed to die on her wedding night. Only by returning to the family that disowned her can Kyra save her sister. Original.
Kyra Peldyrin is a witch, estranged from her disapproving family and resigned to a life of quiet celibacy in this latest addition to Hambly's ( Dog Wizard ) Windrose Chronicles. Then unsettling premonitions convince her that her younger sister is fated to die on her wedding night and Kyra braves her parents' anger to return home. Using her magic, Kyra brings about mishaps that delay the ceremony until she can discover and counteract the curse hanging over her sister. Despite this foreboding set-up, the plot is rather sluggish for the first half of the novel, although richly detailed glimpses into the lives of Kyra's social-climbing haute bourgeois parents are engrossing and amusing. And the pace does eventually pick up: the story's final pages have all the tension and action of a good thriller. Kyra herself is a heroine in the Jane Eyre tradition, plucky, sharp-tongued and iconoclastic; and like her prototype she finds herself increasingly drawn to a man who is outwardly unattractive but nonetheless compelling. Their romance is almost incidental, though, as the story chiefly concerns itself with Kyra's melodramatic family life and with the gradual uncovering of a dark secret from the past. Hambly writes well, but the contrast between the charmingly mundane passages about domestic life in the Peldyrin household and the more overwrought accounts of Kyra's adventures makes for a somewhat disjunctive reading experience. (Apr.)
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November 01, 2009: This is the first Barbara Hambly novel I have read, and on the strength of it I doubt it will be my last. Her characters are likable, her world well-fleshed out, and the plot builds tension well and set up a fairly good climax and denoument.
However, it felt like there was a lot of chaff mixed in with the wheat of this story. It was told using a rather self-conscious mix of present-day action and flashbacks that advanced the plot -- a device which, while I don't object to it as a rule, is hard to pull off well. The descriptive passages were heavy-handed, and while there were some excellent moments where a particular description hit me with immediacy and accuracy, most of the passages felt like they simply had to be waded through. I might have enjoyed the book more if there were no wonderful little moments of description, as then I would have felt free to simply skim all those passages; as it was, I felt the need to keep a sharp eye out for those bright flashes, and my enjoyment suffered as a result.The ending wrapped things up a little too cleanly for my tastes -- Kyra's changed relationship with her parents struck me as simply far too easy a cop-out, as was the resolution of her romantic dilemma -- but the happy ending isn't totally unearned, and does leave a pleasant taste in my memory. So all in all, while not earth-shattering in any way, this is a good afternoon's read and a solid addition to the romantic fantasy cannon.I Also Recommend: Beauty, Howl's Moving Castle, The Shape-Changer's Wife.