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Mistress of the Pearl (The Pearl, Book 3)
 
 
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Mistress of the Pearl (The Pearl, Book 3) [Hardcover]

Eric Van Lustbader (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Pearl April 1, 2004
Kundala is Miina's world, created by that Goddess with the help of the dragons. But Miina is missing, and her people have been enslaved by the alien V'ornn. Now a savior has come, the Dar Sala-at, a messiah promised by prophecy yet unlike anyone's expectations: within the body of a beautiful young woman is the mind and spirit of a unique Kundalan female who is joined in mystical partnership with the mind and spirit of Annon Ashera, a V'ornn male, the last survivor of a noble family. Together the two adolescents have matured and merged into a new joint identity. Now their common destiny, and Kundala's, is in their own hands.

In Lustbader's richly imagined saga The Pearl, magic and science clash on an epic scale. As in the Midkemia novels of Raymond Feist, the juxtaposition shows that neither is inherently good or evil. It is the people using magic or science who give them meaning, and Lustbader has created people you will never forget:

Riane, the Dar-Sala-at; Eleana, the woman she loves twice over; Kurgan, the V'ornn usurper who raped Eleana and sired her child; Marethyn Stogggul, Kurgan's defiant sister, an artist who joins the Kundalan resistance; Marethyn's lover, chief trader Sornnn SaTrryn, who secretly helps the resistance as well; and the fabulous Krystren, the Sarakkon woman from the mysterious southern continent, who comes north on a secret mission and will change the lives of everyone she meets. All the while, the evil Sauromicians threaten the world as they seek to use banestones to bind a dragon.

With each new volume, The Pearl has bloomed and ramified like a gorgeous flowering vine. The Mistress of the Pearl is the best yet, and those who have read the previous books will find new sources of excitement and enlightenment, but this is also a great place to begin catching up with the series, as the Pearl shines ever brighter.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Fans of bestseller Lustbader will welcome the third hefty installment in his Pearl fantasy series (after 2002's The Veil of a Thousand Tears), with its wildly complex plot, breathless action and jaw-breaking nomenclature (Khagggun, Mesagggun, etc.), though newcomers might wish they had a roadmap. On the planet Kundala, the conquering V'ornn are having trouble subduing the natives, who have a champion in the woman Riane, aka "the Dar Sala-at, the fabled savior, destined to lead the Kundalan uprising against their alien V'ornn oppressors." Meanwhile, Annon, a dead V'ornn whose consciousness survives within Riane, shows that some V'ornn are worthy of the reader's sympathy. Riane's friend Eleana, who loved Annon, finds herself strangely attracted to Riane. The Kundalans' ultimate salvation, however, rests in securing the mystical Pearl. Tolkien's rings (reflected in the Pearl's "banestones") and the pseudo-Islamicism of Herbert's Dune are among the author's many obvious literary influences, while in a display of tongue-in-cheek humor three V'ornn admirals act a bit like the Three Stooges. Lustbader keeps scene-setting to a minimum ("Sapphire evening spread its wings over the great steppe") amid all the fighting and skullduggery. A surprise twist at the end serves as a springboard to a fourth volume.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Van Lustbader continues grappling with questions of technological morality in volume 3 of the Pearl. The Ring of the Five Dragons (2001) and The Veil of a Thousand Tears (2002) introduced two races in conflict: the invading V'ornn and the peaceful and spiritual Kundalan, oppressed by the V'ornn for more than a century. The V'ornn exploit Kundala for its resources, but the rarely seen V'ornn rulers, the Gyrgon technomages, have a more ghastly agenda: to genetically reengineer the DNA of mixed Kundalan-V'ornn offspring to produce exceptionally powerful warriors who are part creature, part machine. The reengineering process is far from perfected, and most of the resultant children die hideous, bloody deaths or go mad. Riane, the prophesied Dar-Sala-at, and her companions continue their desperate search for the sacred Pearl, with which she can save Kundala and free her people from the V'ornn. Now she faces the most forbidding task thus far, to wrest control of the banestones from the evil Sauromicians, soulless magicians whose black-magical knowledge is vast and who, having found the ninth and last banestone, will wield all the known power in Kundala. Van Lustbader's engaging novel builds powerfully upon its predecessors, thanks to characters of uncommon depth and complexity, lots of perplexing dilemmas for them to wrestle with, and plenty of exciting swordplay and gore. Paula Luedtke
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 592 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Books; First Edition edition (April 1, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312872372
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312872373
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.4 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.9 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,312,191 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Eric Van Lustbader is the author of more than twenty-five best-selling novels, including The Ninja, a New York Times bestseller for 24 weeks, in which he introduced Nicholas Linnear, one of modern fictions most beloved and enduring heroes. His New York Times bestselling novel, "The Testament," was published in September, 2006 and in paperback in August, 2007.
His novels have been translated into over twenty languages; his books are best-sellers worldwide and are so popular whole sections of bookstores from Bangkok to Dublin are devoted to them. The Ninja was sold to 20th Century-Fox. It is now in pre-production.
Mr. Lustbader is a graduate of Columbia College, with a degree in Sociology. Before turning to writing full time, he enjoyed highly successful careers in the New York City public school system, where he holds licenses in both elementary and early childhood education, and in the music business. He is a second-level Reiki master.

 

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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Deceptive Pearl, September 15, 2006
By 
Mistress of the Pearl (2004) is the third Fantasy novel in The Pearl series, following The Veil of a Thousand Tears. In the previous volume, Kurgan learned that Nith Batoxxx was possessed by the Archdaemon Pyphoros. Then he learned that a Gyrgon had tampered with Terrettt's brain and was certain that it was Nith Batoxxx. When Kurgan, Sornnn and Batoxxx/Pyphoros transitted to Za Hara-at, they found Riane waiting for them. In a battle where the daemon was attacked by everybody and everything, Nith Batoxxx was killed and the daemon was consigned to the Abyss. Then Riane entered Otherwhere with the Veil of a Thousand Tears and freed Giyan's avatar.

In this novel, Krystren, a Sarakkon Onnda, sails on the Oomaloo to the Northern continent in a mission for the Orieniad. She carries a message for her brother, Courion, captain of the Omaline. As they approach their destination, a sudden storm drives them away from land and into the Illuminated Sea. There they run into a reef and the Oomaloo rapidly breaks up. Two boats get away from the ship, but are attacked by a Black Chimaera. The first mate, an agent of the Sintire, attacks the captain and kills him, but then Krystren kills him. Krystren, the only survivor, paddles the figurehead of the Great Mother Yahe toward shore. She reaches the strand with a little help from the Black Chimera.

After a long nap, Krystren climbs the cliff up to a ledge, which leads to a manmade tunnel. At the end of the short tunnel is a wall, with a door in it. When she cannot open the door, Krystren falls asleep beside it. Later the opening door wakes her and she hides behind it. A black robed and hooded man comes through the door and climbs a stairway that she had previously overlooked. Then he comes down the stairs leading a young man with a glazed look in his eyes. Calling him Dar Sala-at, the cloaked man leads him to the door. Krystren has already snuck into the next room and watches the pair descend a long pole down into a large cavern. She climbs down part way and sees a green dragon in a cage.

Giyan has been training Riane, the true Dar Sala-at, in sorcery. Now she teaches her how to cache her magic books in the Other Side, the null space between realms. They use a mirror, which reminds the rappa Thigpen of necromancers and banestones. Despite Giyan's attempts to change the subject, Thigpen continues to provide Riane with basic information on the banestones.

Kurgan, the new Regent of the V'oorn, is attending a burial service for Courion on the Omaline. Unfortunately, the Sarakkon crew have no body to bury. While he knows that Curion's body is within Nith Batoxxx's laboratory in the goron-wave chamber, Kurgan doesn't tell the crew that Batoxxx had killed their captain. The crew substitutes Curion's favorite sea dirk for his body.

Kurgan returns to his kashiggen to smoke laaga and think about Eleana. He saw her with Riane in Za Hara-at and is still obsessed with her. Nith Nassam interrupts these thoughts and takes him to Nith Batoxxx's laboratory in the Temple of Mnemonics. Kurgan makes several attempts to win concessions from Nassam, but all are denied. Nassam insists that Kurgan will do only what Nassam tells him to do, no more and no less. Kurgan reacts in his typical manner: he determines to get the better of all Grygons.

As Riane is gazing in the mirror, she is overcome by a vision of her prior life. She is walking through a windswept landscape to a high wall. She fits an enormous key into an iron lock and opens the gates. Inside the walls is a courtyard laid with pink gravel. It is bisected by a black path. A pair of fountains flank the pathway, one labeled MEMORY and the other OBLIVION. She wakes from the vision with a gasp. Giyan explains the vision as a construct built by Riane. In it are stored all of Riane's memories. The ones marked OBLIVION are presently unavailable to her, but they may be restored.

Riane, Eleana and Thigpen venture into the Regent's palace once again to try the Storehouse Door. After a chase by Kurgan and his Haaar-kyut, they accidentally slide down the wrong path at the triple intersection. There they encounter the Hagoshrin, who ignores Riane's claims of being the Dar Sala-at; he is only interested in feasting on her bones. But Riane and Eleana escape from the Hagoshrin and find the Storehouse Door. This time the door opens when Riane puts her finger in the Ring of Five Dragons. She walks through, but the door closes in Eleana's face. Inside is the Hagoshrin, but now it is aware of her identity as the Dar Sala-at and cooperates.

Sornnn and Minnum, the reformed sauromician, have found a banestone in the ruins of Za Hara-at, but it disappears from their possessions. Riane learns from the Hagoshrin that the sauromicians have eight of the banestones, but that Kurgan has the ninth stone. Moreover, Kurgan now has Eleana. The Hagoshrin takes Riane and Thigpen to Kurgan's hiding place to retrieve Eleana and the ninth banestone.

In this story, Riane locates the Pearl, but finds that it is not exactly as the prophecies foretell. Kurgan achieves his highest desire. Marethyn finds another way of life in the Kundalan Resistance. Everything is changing, but this volume only shows the beginnings of that change. So many plot lines are left dangling. Does this mean that a sequel is forthcoming?

Be warned that the author does not hesitate to kill off the major characters. But don't expect these characters to remain dead; at least one is resurrected from the land of the dead and others cheat death one way or another. And one dead good guy comes back as a villain!

Recommended for Lustbader fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of transformation, unexpected plot twists and powerful magic.

-Arthur W. Jordin
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars unputdownable, but ..., December 8, 2004
This review is from: Mistress of the Pearl (The Pearl, Book 3) (Hardcover)
yes the book is hard to put down and is definitely better than the second installment. but is still a drag in places.

negatives :

1. unnecessary development of new situations/characters unrelated or marginally related to the central plot - especially the endless array of khaggun colonels, marshals, generals, their daughters etc (hard to keep track of who is who!), sarakkon and sauromagicians etc. in contrast the central plot/characters lack adequate development.

2. the nawatir is supposedly the dar salat's protector - but in this book neither of them are even together at any point in time! also when we first heard about the nawatir we thought that he would kick khaggun butts! but for all his prowess, he keeps getting beaten up!

3. why should the good guys always struggle? in each and every difficult situation they confront they never have it easy - they alway get beaten up initially and only later they prevail. it gets tiring after a while.

i thought this series was a trilogy and was keen to see the conclusion. but apparently it is going to go on. hopefully not like robert jordan's eye of the world series on which the twilight has set!
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Worth waiting for!, May 6, 2004
By 
"zette2254" (Edmonton, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mistress of the Pearl (The Pearl, Book 3) (Hardcover)
Many years ago, I read Van Lustbader's Dai-san trilogy and thought...this guy should stick to thrillers. He has a knack. But then his thrillers became stale and formulaic. He has re-invented himself as a writer with the Pearl series, of which, this is the third installment.
Kundala rivals Raymond E. Feist's Midkemia. It is a land of the usual fantasy novel with high-tech thrown in. It's a well-done blend. Characters are well-developed and the dialogue is, at times, highly entertaining....way beyond the usual. These characters have senses of humour, bad days and good ones.
Given the ending, it's likely we will see more of this world and I can hardly wait.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
An exceptionally frigid winter was at last drawing to a close. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
goron particles, hyperexcited ions, laaga stick, power bourns, data blossom, sysal trees, bio cortical net, black sixth finger, ion pistol, ion mace, heuristic nets, ion forge, fusion lamps, ion cannon, crystal dagger, defensive spell, red jade, northern continent, twin blades
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Nith Batoxxx, Nith Immmon, Nith Nassam, Dar Sala-at, Gul Aluf, Axis Tyr, Konara Inggres, Nith Einon, Kirlll Qandda, First-Captain Kwenn, Raan Tallus, Eye of Ajbal, Hannn Mennus, Kurgan Stogggul, Nith Sahor, Djenn Marre, First Mother, Prime Factor, Great Goddess, Temple of Mnemonics, Teww Dacce, Abbey of Floating White, Fleet-Admiral Pnin, Skreeling Engine, Stogggul Kurgan
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