Amazon.com Review
A novel ahead of its time (1931) in many ways due to its quiet feminism and its insistence that women could have fun, and quest-plots, as well as men, this was acclaimed as one of the most important books of the year it was published. Mythical and historical at once, the story follows Erif Der in her journeys through the world of her time as she searches for atonement, reconciliation and cleansing. Lyrical descriptive writing, lucid treatments of politics and war and intensely intimate observation of the needs and deeds of human beings fill this book, which manages to be earthy and transcendent at once.
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From Publishers Weekly
Originally published in 1931, this dense, epic-length fantasy is a quest story cunningly woven of history and myth. Erif Der, a witch in a Black Sea land, falls in love with the king whom she was supposed to topple. As Spring Queen, she takes revenge on her scheming father, introduces death into the cycle of the seasons and must seek purification of her soul. Another seeker is Kleomenes, rebel king of Sparta, who is willing to put up his own children and his mother as hostages for the sake of the revolution in which he fervently believes. Berris Der, brother of Erif and an adventurous painter-sculptor hopelessly in love with a Spartan woman, represents a third type of quester. There are many others in a crowded canvas stretching from Asia Minor to Egypt. In scenes of beauty and power, Mitchison breathes life into such perennial themes as courage, forgiveness, the search for meaning, and self-sacrifice.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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edition.