|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
5 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An Excellent Book In An Outstanding Series.,
By Elyon (Mesilla, New Mexico) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Time of Omens (Deverry) (Mass Market Paperback)
I am surprised there are no other reviews of this book, as it is part of one of the truly outstanding series in fantasy fiction, and certainly deserving of some of the attention currently being heaped upon the contemporaneous "World of Time" series by Jordan, or the recent "A Song of Ice and Fire" begun by Martin. While lacking in some of the richness of detail and characterization present in those works, nonetheless this series is deserving of serious attention by fans of the genre.Set within a celtic realm, Kerr's tale actually follows the interwoven stories of several different characters spread across a time span of several hundred years in the history of the Westlands. Some readers used to the more conventional use of a linear plot may find this disconcerting, but Kerr has used it effectively and originally in evolving her story over the past six books. The realms of Westlands are varied and richly landscaped, and the mythology behind the world intriguing. The only flaw that prevented me from assigning 5 stars to this book was Kerr's sketchy handling of Jill's time spent in Anmurdio, a problem similar to those that plagued Kerr's first book, "Daggerspell." Nonetheless, a worthy successor to previous books in the series, and definately well worth the read. One final note of complaint, directed at the publisher: It would be helpful, for those of us with a geographical bent, to provide maps of the Westlands with all of the books in the series. Since the second, book maps have been absent, except for a partial map available in "The Dragon Revenant." Even more irritating is the lack of provision in certain books of a full and complete character list covering at least the major characters in all six books. With all the shifts in plot line in time that take place, as well as the reappearance of certain characters in later books, it would be helpful to have this aid for one's memory.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Mainly the Time of Troubles, but also entertainers in Bardek,
By Michele L. Worley (Kingdom of the Mouse, United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Time of Omens (Deverry) (Mass Market Paperback)
For those unfamiliar with the series, it is told in a nonlinear, braided style, alternating between the 'present day' with Jill and Rhodry, and various narrative threads in the past. Characters who fail to learn lessons in a current life are reborn to work through their problems until the souls involved finally get it *right* - so characters can die, and tragically, and only the magicians of the dweomer know that it ends nothing and solves nothing.This volume picks up the thread of the Time of Troubles where _The Bristling Wood_ left off, and is continued in _The Red Wyvern_. In the present day, picking up a thread from _The Dragon Revenant_, Salamander has turned his talent for dweomer into a living as a stage magician in the Bardek archipelago; as a half-elf, he has a life long enough to search for the soul of his beloved wife, dead untimely of fever, until he finds her reincarnation. Alas, the dweomer can't just be turned on and off like a lightswitch, and he'll pay for his abandonment of his true calling someday if he doesn't look out. In the time of troubles, Maryn, the young Marked Prince of Pyrdon, is being groomed by Nevyn as the high king who can bring the wars to a halt, since he has close blood ties to all the contending claims for the throne, except Cerrmor - and since Cerrmor's heir is Princess Bellyra, an unmarried girl of Maryn's own age, that's not a problem. Cerrmor is in dire straits, and will welcome Maryn as a suitor for Bellyra with open arms - if he can get there alive. (Bellyra, for her part, is intelligent enough to realize that he'll never love her; she's just what he needs for the kingdom's sovereignty, and maybe a friend and ally, but no more.) Some followers of the dark dweomer attempted to work magic against Maryn by creating a curse tablet. Nevyn has managed to get hold of it, but daren't destroy it, discard it, or be caught with it while trying to unravel the spells on it without harming Maryn. (This thread eventually doubles back on itself, in Kerr's nonlinear, braided storytelling style, giving him the idea for creating the Great Stone of the West (the opposite of the curse tablet) which we saw back in volume 2, _Darkspell_.) Be warned, the dark dweomer workers did something VILE to enchant the tablet - Nevyn finds the evidence with the tablet. Grisly. Also, while Maryn has been groomed to be a warrior's ideal of a king, he's not a saint (the silver daggers when in transit introduce him to a brothel, which actually turns into a hilarious if bawdy scene through no fault of Maryn's). Bellyra, for her part, is not only intelligent, but unusually well-educated and intellectual, and will grow into a formidable political force if she survives the siege of Cerrmor. Like Maryn, she is one of the recurring characters being reincarnated at different stages in the history of the series. One of her incarnations appears in _A Time of Exile_, while both she and Maryn have been reborn late in the 'present' day.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I can't get enough of Deverry!,
By Emil Josefsson (mrdouglas@geocities.com) (Orebro, Sweden) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Time of Omens (Deverry) (Mass Market Paperback)
This was the first Deverry book I read, and I spent the summer of 1994 reading it. Then I spent the rest of 1994 reading all the previous volumes! Then it was time to read the next volume in the series, and then the next...hopefully Katherine Kerr will never stop writing about Devrry!
3.0 out of 5 stars
Great story, let down by poor QA.,
By S Lamble (Glen Waverley, Vic Australia) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: A Time of Omens (Deverry Cycle Westlands 2) (Kindle Edition)
I've been reading this series since 1998, and love it. Having it available in eBook format is a fantastic plus; I'm on limited space, and need to cut back on the physical volumes.Unfortunately, this Kindle edition - unlike the physically printed "dead tree" edition - is marred by myriad typos and formatting errors. Some of them are minor (using the wrong apostrophe for abbreviations; hyphenation marks where they don't belong); some are more significant (spelling mistakes, probably from OCR errors that weren't caught on a proof-read; poor text flow - missing paragraph breaks and similar.) The book itself - indeed, the entire series - is a fantastic read, and well worth the asking price. Sadly, the eBook edition needs more polish before it can be called a properly finished product. The same applies to the other three books in the Westlands cycle of the overall series (I haven't yet bought the other 11 books for my Kindle.)
5.0 out of 5 stars
New twist on Sword and Sorcery,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: A Time of Omens (Deverry) (Mass Market Paperback)
This book lies somewhere in the middle of a huge 16-book series. The books take place in some place like medieval England, but it's not really. There are elves, dwarves, "horsekin" (who are a race of bad guys), and the occasional dragon. The dragons help out the "good guys", but not always in politically correct ways. There is also a race of god-like beings that can travel between dimenions of different worlds. Some of these beings help the "good guys" and some help the "bad guys".Oh, there is also magic, or "deowemer" as they call it. Only a few people have these magic skills and the ones that do must spend a long time practicing and studying to perfect those skills. There are people with deowemer in all the different groups which make the various interactions and battles to the death more interesting. Speaking of death, there is quite a bit. However, all the killing takes place face-to-face on foot or on horseback. If you are looking for a long series of great "sword and sorcery" tales, you should consider this offering by Katharine Kerr. |
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
A Time of Omens (Bantam Spectra Book) by Katharine Kerr (Paperback - July 1, 1992)
Used & New from: $0.01
| ||