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Horizon (The Sharing Knife: Vol. 4)(Library Edition)
 
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Horizon (The Sharing Knife: Vol. 4)(Library Edition) [MP3 CD]

Lois McMaster Bujold (Author), Bernadette Dunne (Reader)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (35 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Sharing Knife August 1, 2009
In a world where malices, remnants of ancient magic, can erupt with life-destroying power, only the soldier-sorcerer Lakewalkers have mastered the ability to kill them. But Lakewalkers keep their uncanny secrets and themselves from the farmers they protect. So when patroller Dag rescued farm girl Fawn, neither expected to fall in love, marry, and defy both their kin to seek new solutions to the split between their peoples. As Dag's powers have grown, so has his frustration with the Lakewalkers' rigid mores. Fawn and Dag see that their world is changing and that the traditional Lakewalker practices cannot hold the malices at bay forever. Yet for all the customs that Dag and Fawn have challenged, they will soon be confronted with a crisis beyond imagining. When the old ways fail, can their untried new ways stand against their world's deadliest foe?

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Compelling....Bujold excels at creating interesting and sympathetic characters, and this story will satisfy readers who enjoy romance as much as adventure. --Publishers Weekly

[Bujold s] eventful conclusion to [The Sharing Knife] series proves that her talent for storytelling persists regardless of genre. --Library Journal

Bujold develops the characters and their relationship skillfully enough to please romance as well as fantasy fans. --Booklist

About the Author

LOIS MCMASTER BUJOLD burst upon the science fiction world in 1986 with Shards of Honor, the first of the Vorkosigan Saga novels. She has won the Hugo Award four times and the Nebula Award twice. The mother of two, she lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Product Details

  • MP3 CD: 1 pages
  • Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.; Unabridged MP3CD edition (August 1, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 143323596X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1433235962
  • Product Dimensions: 7.4 x 5.3 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (35 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,760,803 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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60 of 62 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The story concludes but life goes on, January 29, 2009
By 
Mike Garrison (Covington, WA USA) - See all my reviews
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First off, this is the second half of the second story in a two story, four book series. So no, don't start here. The book does not (and is not intended to) act as a standalone novel. So from now on I'll assume the reader of this review has read the other three books.

I loved this whole extended story. And I'm glad to say, the final book does not disappoint. It neither wraps up all the problems of the whole world nor leaves a bunch of messy unfinished business. It continues the story of characters we've come to know and love, and it introduces still more of them (not always loveable). It also completes the "there and back again" story of Fawn and Dag's trip to the sea.

The main message of the book seems to be that when you can't see a way to solve your problems from where you are standing, sometimes it helps to stand in a different place. That's true geographically, and also metaphorically. Dag, who has been patroller and maker, healer and killer, Lakewalker with a Farmer wife, as well as boatman and camp dweller, ends up finally having a diverse enough viewpoint to start seeing the answers. But he can't do it alone.

The marriage of Fawn and Dag had been a shocking breach of the wall between Lakewalker and Farmer societies, up north. But in the south, where malices are few and Farmers are many, it seems the interactions between Farmer and Lakewalker are much more common. Dag rightly realizes that he is seeing the future of the north in the current south, and they haven't solved any of the problems he had spotted brewing back home. But at least the problems were more visible to other people, and that leads to a bit more support from them. The key break comes when he and Fawn are accepted (provisionally) into a Lakewalker camp so that he can apprentice with an expert maker.

But that doesn't continue forever, and eventually Dag ends up shepherding a mixed bag of Farmer and Lakewalker pilgrims up the "Tripoint Trace", the road/trail that runs from the south back to the north. Just as the rivers are thinly disguised versions of the Mississippi and Ohio, the trail is a version of the famous Natchez Trace.

Along the way they must solve problems both domestic and magical, as Dag continues on his quest to find some way to protect Farmers from malices. At the same time he continues to try and figure out how Lakewalkers can live with Farmers without either becoming their gods or their demons.

And then, as you knew would happen from the time Dag made the sharing knife in the last book, they encounter a malice. But the malice is running from something else. What could force a malice to flee?

In a conclusion featuring bravery and treachery, wisdom and ignorance, plus well-honed skill and lots of luck, they find out. And then we see that the end of the story does not mean the end of all stories, just the beginning of others.

(That's not to imply there is any sort of cliffhanger ending. I would doubt there will be any direct sequels to these novels. My suspicion is that Bujold has now told the tale she wanted to tell.)
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32 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Worth the Wait, January 31, 2009
By 
L. Roth (Ravena, NY USA) - See all my reviews
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The story of Farmer girl Fawn and Lakewalker Dag has been building through three books to this fourth, as the two of them continue their efforts to find a place in the world where they can live and have the family they want while also finding a way to deal with the crisis they see coming between their peoples and the ancient menace that threatens the whole world. This is not a stand-alone book; for those new to the series the preceding book Passage is a prerequisite at the minimum.

Warning - possible spoilers ahead.

The first two books, Beguilement and Legacy are much more focused on the relationship between Dag and Fawn. How they met, how they fell in love, and just what the two very different worlds they come from are like. Farmers and Lakewalkers do NOT ever marry each other - or so their two respective societies would have it.

Lakewalkers are set apart by their groundsense, an inherited ability to perceive the world in a different way that allows them to work what seems magic to Farmer eyes and fight an ancient foe. The enemy is Malices which emerge at random from the land and threaten to use their vastly more powerful groundsense to drain ground from the world until it all crumbles. Only Lakewalkers can resist the mind-enslaving, ground-ripping power of Malices. Farmers are little more than fodder for Malices - yet they fear and distrust the powers of their only protection, the Lakewalkers who ceaselessly patrol looking for the threat. Only Lakewalkers can kill Malices with their sharing knives, made from the bones of their own dead and primed by the death of a Lakewalker as his or her final gift in the centuries long war against their deadly foes.

Dag Redwing is a nearly burned out Lakewalker patroller more than ready to die, seeking only to take down as many Malices as he can with the years he has left. Having lost his first Lakewalker wife and his left hand to a truly terrible Malice years ago, he is totally unprepared for what happens when he meets the young Farmer girl Fawn Bluefield fleeing her own personal disaster. Caught up in a Malice outbreak, the two them together take down the Malice - he supplies the Sharing Knife, hers is the hand that uses it to teach the Malice how to die. As the two of them seek to survive the aftermath, they fall in love.

From there the story continues as Dag and Fawn first deal with her family, and then with his in the first two books. Both begin to grow and change as neither could have imagined before meeting each other, shaped both by the love they have for each other and the events they face. Fawn is becoming much more than the naive Farmer girl as her hungry mind is opened to a much wider world. Dag becomes reborn as her enthusiasm reopens his eyes to a world he had become numb to. The two of them begin to see that the old ways of Farmer and Lakewalker are no longer adequate to cope with a changing world. By the end of the second book, Dag is ready to move on from being a patroller as his groundsense begins to change and develop; Fawn has become much more confident in herself and more experienced - but is still hungry to see more of the world. Together the two of them embark on an epic journey down the great rivers of the land to the sea.

This journey is the third book, Passage. Dag and Fawn embark on a flatboat for a weeks long trip to the sea. Along the way they begin to accumulate their own 'tribe' - Fawn's younger brother who has someone inserted himself in their trip, a couple of young Lakewalker patrollers fleeing their own personal mess, the young boatboss Berry Clearcreek and her crew seeking a missing father and fiance. Working as crew on the flatboat, Fawn and Dag begin to try to find a new way between Farmers and Lakwalkers; educating both sides about each other, breaking through the misunderstandings. Dag's groundsense powers are growing and changing as he fumbles his way to becoming a medicine maker to Farmers. Fawn finds her common sense and bright mind are needed to keep Dag centered as he goes far beyond the bounds of anything he had ever imagined. By journey's end they have reached the sea and survived another great threat.

Dag and Fawn have made some progress with their plans to find a way to close the gap between Farmers and Lakewalkers, but they are a long way from having the answers they need and they keep finding more questions. Horizon begins with Dag not knowing what to do next, and becoming more and more unsettled as he tries to get a handle on his new abilities. It takes Fawn's insight to set him on a way forward. They seek out a master groundsetter among the southern Lakewalkers to teach him what he needs to know.

Southern Lakewalkers are almost a breed apart from their northern kin. Malices are almost unknown; Farmers cover the land, and the southern Lakewalkers are finding it harder and harder to maintain their traditional identity. Although Dag's new mentor is both fascinated and horrified by his experiences, he's also intrigued by Dag's discoveries and their ideas - but Fawn finds little welcome. Dag nonetheless begins to make real progress - and unsettle things when his past as a legendary northern patrol captain surfaces. Things come to a head when Dag is compelled by his new ideals to treat a young Farmer boy who would die otherwise, and is threatened with expulsion for deliberately crossing the line between Farmers and Lakewalkers.

Refusing again to compromise, Dag and Fawn begin a journey back to the north overland along the Tripoint Trace - trailing his mentor along with them! Again Dag and Fawn find themselves as leaders in a growing party of mixed Farmers, riverfolk and Lakewalkers as they seek to find a way forward. The story builds to a sustained climax as Dag and Fawn find their ideas and their hopes tested by a threat they had never imagined. Both will be challenged in ways they had never faced and others will be drawn in, in ways that had never before been seen.

Bujold does a masterful job of bringing the tale told over four books to an end. Along the way there is much humor, plenty of romance, wonderful characters, and enough excitement and drama to satisfy all. What began as an intimate romance between two people has expanded in the course of just over a year (book time) to a thrilling saga with a wider cast. While that expanded focus may not please those who just want the Dag and Fawn story, they still remain the core around which the story turns. The difference is that their relationship has now become so solid, they have much more power to affect those around them. Having been through so many changes in their own selves, they have now become catalysts for change in others and the story expands to watching those changes unfold.

It's a darned good read. Will there be more to come in the future? There's no way of knowing but Bujold has managed to bring all to satisfactory stopping point while leaving plenty of room for future possibilities. In the Vorkosigan saga Bujold created memorable characters in Cordelia Naismith and Aral Vorkosigan with good stories around them - yet really hit her stride with tales of their son Miles. Will something comparable happen here? That question will have to wait for another day. Meanwhile there's quite enough here for now.

Highly Recommended.
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23 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good conclusion to the series, January 28, 2009
Horizon does a good job in wrapping up the "Sharing Knife" series. Readers should definitely not start with this volume - at minimum, you should read "Passage" first.

I found the Passage/Horizon pair a much more compelling read than Beguilement/Legacy. The first two books of the series are mainly focused on Dag and Fawn's relationship with each other, while the second pair is more how they interact with the world (and try to change it).

By necessity there are a few places where "Horizon" drags with exposition while the characters fill in the backstory of the other books, but there is also a great action sequence I hadn't anticipated - I thought that LMB had already explored all the possible types of encounters with the "malices" but I was wrong.

All the plot ends from Passages are wrapped up, in a way that is believable. While I prefer LMB's Vorkosigan and Chalion series, I still enjoyed Dag and Fawn's adventures and will still happily ready anything LMB's wants to write.
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