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The Arm of the Stone [Mass Market Paperback]

Victoria Strauss (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 1998
In the grand epic tradition of Robin McKinley and Patricia McKillip, here's an enchanting and thrilling tale of a young boy whose destiny is to find a legendary magic stone and heal the rift between two worlds.

Long ago, when the worlds of Mindpower and Handpower existed as one, Bron's family was rich and mighty; they were the keepers of the Stone -- the most forceful, sacred, coveted object in the world. But the Stone was stolen by an evil warrior who used it to conquer the world of Mindpower. As young Bron grows to manhood, it is clear that he is the legendary One Who Comes whose fate it is to restore harmony between the worlds.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

A really brilliant novel...a most unusual and fascinating novel, exceedingly well done. -- Anne McCaffrey

A rich story about human nature, this fantasy is a thought-provoking page-turner....A thoroughly enjoyable read. -- Kliatt

Involving fantasy, treated with unusual depth. -- Carolyn Cushman, Locus

About the Author

Victoria Strauss is the author of six fantasy novels, including The Garden of the Stone (Eos, 1999), sequel to The Arm of the Stone. She's a regular book reviewer for the online journal SF Site, and her articles on writing have appeared in Writer's Digest and elsewhere. She's also the webmistress of Writer Beware, the Internet's premier resource on literary scams. She lives in Amherst, Massachussetts, with her husband and two cats.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 426 pages
  • Publisher: Eos (HarperCollins) (April 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0380797518
  • ISBN-13: 978-0380797516
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4.1 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,435,175 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Victoria Strauss is the author of eight fantasy novels for adults and young adults, including the "Way of Arata" duology ("The Burning Land" and "The Awakened City"), and a forthcoming historical fantasy for teens, "Passion Blue." She has written hundreds of book reviews for magazines and ezines, including SF Site, and her articles on writing have appeared in Writer's Digest and elsewhere. In 2006, she served as a judge for the World Fantasy Awards.

An active member of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA), she's Vice-Chair of the Committee on Writing Scams, and co-founder, with Ann Crispin, of Writer Beware, a publishing industry watchdog group that tracks and warns about literary fraud. She maintains the popular Writer Beware website (http://www.writerbeware.com/) and blog (http://www.accrispin.blogspot.com/), and was honored with the SFWA Service Award in 2009.

Visit her at her website: http://www.victoriastrauss.com/

 

Customer Reviews

25 Reviews
5 star:
 (12)
4 star:
 (8)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (25 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Many strong points, but ultimately frustrating, October 24, 2000
By A Customer
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Arm of the Stone (Mass Market Paperback)
There are a lot of things I liked very much about this book.. The background premise (the mysterious Stone, and the division of the mindpower and handpower worlds) is interesting. The writing is technically excellent, particularly good at evoking moods. The characters are likeable. The plot setup (evil theocracy, boy with a Destiny, etc.) takes standard genre tropes and twists them into something a little out of the ordinary, and the way it was developing toward the middle of the book was both unusual and unexpected.

So why did I want to throw the book across the room when I finished it?

Put simply, the story Ms. Strauss chose to focus on was not the story I wanted to read. The thing that hooked me most in the early and middle sections of the book was the gradual discoveries by the 2 main characters that their childhood assumptions and goals were based on misconceptions about the Way Things Were, and that the real world, and their real places in it, involved a lot more ambiguity and compromise than they expected. The middle sections of this book portrayed very sensitively the process of disillusionment, and the replacement of illusions with genuine understanding and idealism, and I was fascinated with the way the characters were developing.

Unfortinately, what followed was not a continuation, but a contradiction: the story did a jump-cut across the following 20 years, and the characters have both arrived in places that are perfectly consistent with their early illusions, not at all so with the direction they seemed to be moving in before the break. How did this happen? We get a bit of backfill and narrative explanation, but the real answer can only be, that's what had to happen because the author needed it so to make her plot work out.

There are a number of clumsy elements in the final third of the book (important things happening offstage, for instance, and repetition of events from different points of view) that show a significantly lower level of craftsmanship than the earlier portions. The handling of several characters in that section was also unsatisfying, and inconsistent with what had come before. The final twist of the plot was indeed unexpected, but I wasn't in the mood to appreciate it.

What I wanted, and didn't get, was the 200 pages of the Missing Years. Enough is implied and reported that it seems likely some of the missing material may have actually been present in an earlier draft of the novel -- if so, I'm afraid it was a mistake to cut it out. The imperative to bring the paths of the 2 main characters into convergence may have been overwhelming -- but I would have been much happier with the result had it been resisted, and the plot allowed to take a different shape.

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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Bare, Ruined, but Magical Choirs, February 25, 2001
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Arm of the Stone (Mass Market Paperback)
"The Arm of the Stone" is a fantasy about religion gone bad - not my favorite type of reading - but this is a very powerful, intricately plotted book. It is chronicle of hatred, prophecy, and a very, very conservative religious elite who govern through magic (the Domain of the Mind)and forbid any kind of mechanical innovation (the Domain of the Hand). The 'Stone' of the title is the magical equivalent of a fragment of the True Cross. A millennium before this novel begins, the Stone was stolen from its loving and noble caretakers who are hunted to extermination over the years. As you begin to read, the Stone's true caretakers are reduced to a single family, and ultimately, to a single boy. How he seeks to recover the Stone and wreak vengence on those who stole it is the heart of the story.

Now the bad news: reading this book was a lot like being a spectator at a chess match. If the cold, logical intricacies of the religion that play out through this book are of interest to you, you won't mind sitting still until the end game. The story's climax is certainly worth the wait.

However, if you're like me you'll put "The Arm of the Stone" aside, maybe for a week at a time, and look for something a bit more frivolous. I read all ten of Roger Zelazny's Amber novels ("The Great Book of Amber") before I picked up "The Arm of the Stone" and finished it.

The contrast between Zelazny's Amber and the grim, cold world of the Stone is like the difference between winning a vacation to Venusburg, or spending an eon in the refrigerated compartment of Purgatory. Zelazny's plots skip forward, driven by his wise-cracking, laid-back characters, while "Arm of the Stone" inches forward with all of the grim momentum of a glacier.

All religious quibbles aside though, I'm ordering the sequel, "Garden of the Stone". I really did come to care about the Stone's two main characters, chess pieces though they were. And it's hard to find fantasy as original, and intricately plotted, and well-written as was "The Arm of the Stone."

Read it out of duty, if not for fun.

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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kept me up all night, June 17, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The Arm of the Stone (Mass Market Paperback)
A gripping story which takes a standard fantasy story - the hero's quest for some stolen magic artifact - and makes it new. Lots of unexpected twists. I was especially intrigued by the world which Strauss created. The story is told from two points of view - one male and one female. Both characters are fully realized, complex people with conflicting goals.

Read it just for kicks and you won't be disappointed - but thoughtful readers will also find lots to ponder here. Highly recommended.

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