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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Contradictory and yet strangely compelling...
I wouldn't exactly call Anna a particlularly likeable character. She's petty, ruthless and she almost hates all men. Although the book suggests that Erde is slightly sexist, the only person in the book who is majorly bashing the other gender is Anna. Yet despite this, she is a fascinating character. Because her beliefs drip hypocrisy, (Killing as many people as you...
Published on January 5, 1999

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Harmonies were a bit off key
Well this is the 2nd book featuring Anna the Soprano Sorceress. I did wait for this one to come out and I hate to admit it but I was a bit disappointed. The story seemed to really plod along at times, in fact at some points it was actually boring! Also I realize it's a feudal society but is every man really that much dumber than the females?? Anyway while it wasn't...
Published on July 5, 1999 by Emmanuel Umoren


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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Harmonies were a bit off key, July 5, 1999
By 
Emmanuel Umoren (Oswego, IL United States) - See all my reviews
Well this is the 2nd book featuring Anna the Soprano Sorceress. I did wait for this one to come out and I hate to admit it but I was a bit disappointed. The story seemed to really plod along at times, in fact at some points it was actually boring! Also I realize it's a feudal society but is every man really that much dumber than the females?? Anyway while it wasn't as great as the first I must say overall I did enjoy it. The multiple unresolved and tangled plotlines really kept me intrigued. Modesitt is also doing a great job of showing that being the ruler ain't all that great and that being the biggest shark in the water tends to attract every other shark. Well here's to hoping the 3rd book is on par with the 1st!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Contradictory and yet strangely compelling..., January 5, 1999
By A Customer
I wouldn't exactly call Anna a particlularly likeable character. She's petty, ruthless and she almost hates all men. Although the book suggests that Erde is slightly sexist, the only person in the book who is majorly bashing the other gender is Anna. Yet despite this, she is a fascinating character. Because her beliefs drip hypocrisy, (Killing as many people as you want is okay as long as you have justifiable motives? Yeah, right!) she has a certain dimension to her many other heroines lack. However, I feel that supporting characters need more development. Also interesting is how the book questions the limitations of being a ruler, and lets us look into the mind of a conqueror. Fascinating read, albeit heroine can be irritating.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Further Adventures of the Soprano Sorceress, May 23, 2000
In the follow up to The Soprano Sorceress, Anna finds herself and her adopted nation under siege from all sides. Using her powerful spell songs, Anna manages to pull through but not without some difficulty. I'd like to see this series explore her use of spell songs to control humans. She has used it innumerable times to force people to behave a certain way and it should have some dark consequences later on.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars GREAT BOOK!!!, July 23, 1999
By A Customer
of course, being a sappy romantic i was hoping for a small love story in this book. Because usually stories of women heroines usually ends with a love story but not this one. It was serious and intriguing AND long but i was able to finish it in two days (i was just that enthusiastic!). I was hopin for a little more detail about the characters other than Anna but the author just left you with your imagination to figure it out for yourself. N-e wayz, i was hoping for a little more drama, it became a little dry at sometimes but i still loved it! So be off! And buy this book = )
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This was a great 2nd book in the SpellSong series., July 5, 1999
By A Customer
The Spellsong series is a fresh and differnet approach to magic.It uses a completly different avenue towards adventure. I look forward to the next book Darksong Rising. Keep up the good work Mr.M, most enjoyable reading.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Harmonious Fun, January 12, 1999
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I stumbled onto the first book of this series,"The Soprano Sorceress," in the library and thoroughly enjoyed it. I was even more pleased to see that Modesitt had made the premise into a series. Anna is a strong and likable charecter sent into hard, dry, gritty times. Modesitt paints almost too realistic a setting making me wish for just a little relief by way of greener scenery or ease for the main charecters. I personally do not care for so much carnage and war in what I read, but I cared enough for Anna to read nonstop to the end. More on minor charecters that actually live would be nice. Do not be deterred. This is a great and fun read. A natural for anyone who understands the power of music and loves fantacy.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Very Nice Book, January 8, 1999
Very building, starting with mere problems with the infrastructure of Defalk, but building to a full-scale invasion of neighboring Dumar. The changes in tense are very clever and unique. Not even Terry Brooks would do something like that...
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A tallent well exploited!, October 24, 1998
By A Customer
Since the sprano sorceress I have been an big fan of L.E.Modesitt, and this latest book has done nothing to belittle my admiration. I loved the book, and you cannot but like Anna and the strength determination that she shows in the difficult choices that she has to face. Also it describes admirably the terrible loneliness that accompenies great power and how it sets her apart from those around her. The plot also has some unforseen twists that are unexpected. I enjoyed this book very much and counting the days till the next book.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Decently done sequel, A tad light on character building, May 1, 1998
By A Customer
I liked this volume over the first. The building of the relationship between Anna and Lord Jecks was handled well and added much to the over-all plot development. I would have liked to have seen more details on "Darksong" majic and why it has the effects it does. Maybe we learn as Anna does. I am looking forward to the next in this series. All in all it is a darn good read, good escapism; which is why we read fantasy isn't it? If I want realism, I'll read Time or Newsweek.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Dissapointing Sequel, April 16, 2003
I really enjoyed the first book in the series, and was excited to read the next one. What I got was a very blah book. It's hard to pinpoint the exact problem.

Almost all character/world building is left to the first novel. The first novel had Anna's introduction to Erde and many of her reactions to her new circumstances, and learning about her new powers. This book doesn't build on those themes much, though relying on the same complaints she often had, from the first book.

All politics are mostly shown by snippits of the other world leaders of Erde having bland discussion with their subordinates. Perhaps this is all building towards something larger in the next book, but I felt that I would have been just fine with Anna's storyline, and not had the world politics revealed to me without so much as a spellsong.

OK, the novel is called the Spellsong War, but the Spellsong War parts bored me to tears, as well as the traveling between them, so what was left to this book? Not much.

Speaking of long sections. I haven't read many Modestitt Jr books, so I don't know if this practice of copying text is common in the other ones. I could almost feel the copy-paste in the computer happening as I read. I had the sense that I had read several sections before, almost to the letter.

The same description about flowery language, same complaing from Anna about the things following it happened over and over.
It's always Holly Lolly Polly Pop... We learned more warm ups in 2nd grade, why does she almost never vary it?
Almost everytime the hat is mentioned it is 'the floppy hat' with no other description. If you're not providing new information about an item, why bother mentioning it? I can almost always remember to imagine it as floppy. or flowery, or that she has to clear the same mucus from her throat or ect.

Music. This is a problem. I have never been an opera singer, but I have been in a performing orchestra. Anna is missing some spark that makes it seem like she's been up on the stage. That she knows more about music than words like vocalise, or strophic (which is not clear to me, as a musician, though I could research it). She never seems to feel the music build in her, never describes what it's like to be the music, the intrument, to be carried by the rush of performance. Perhaps she's too...tired.(as she always is) But would it have hurt L.E. to do a bit more research into how music feels? how it feels to perform? Has he ever talked to a group of musicians? felt their passion? seen how they can geek out over an overture, or aria? Also, I understand she may not be a composer, but the snippets provided don't do enough to show that they are actually part of songs, The closest we get is a bit from The Battle Hymn, but as a classically trained opera singer(usually charged with memorization of their music) she should have a much larger set of music to draw from, even children's music as she's had children.

Many of these things I forgave in the first novel, due to the intresting premise, characters, places. Somehow Anna has become a flatter character, with less to offer in this novel. I had expected things to evolve more, and was let down.

With all of that said, I'll still likely give the 3rd book a try, I'm still interested in the premise, and want to see if things really do improve with the 3rd novel. I'm hoping for less travel, and more character building.

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The Spellsong War
The Spellsong War by L. E. Modesitt Jr. (Paperback - 1998)
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