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The Assassins of Tamurin (Hardcover)

by S. D. Tower (Author) "The people of my village cast me out when I was eleven..." (more)
Key Phrases: spirit summoner, honored mistress, honored lady, Sun Lord, Master Luasin, Three Springs (more...)
4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (25 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
In this well-crafted and absorbing romantic high fantasy debut, set in a land resembling ancient China, Lale, an 11-year-old foundling girl, is driven from her village of Riversong to take refuge with Makina, the ruler of Tamurin. Makina (aka the "Midnight Mother") runs the School of Serene Repose for the selected girls who are her adopted "daughters." At 17, Lale is one of the promising pupils dispatched to the School of Three Rivers, to be trained as a ninja, as part of Makina's longstanding plot for both personal and political vengeance on Terem Rathai, the ruler of neighboring Bethiya. Lale later arrives as an actress at Terem's capital, where she attracts the ruler's eye and is raised to the status of his established mistress, but she can't change sides completely or she'll die a horrible death by sorcery. However, her love for Terem grows, for he is attractive in both person and politics, and Makina's plots increasingly sicken. Eventually, the course of true love zigzags around invading armies, magic, misunderstandings and newly rediscovered ancestries to the expected happy ending. That ending may be somewhat rushed, with Nilang the sorceress acting like a dea ex machina and Terem being almost too forgiving, but even critical readers will have enjoyed the fine narrative technique, superior world-building and characterization. The author is also to be commended for heroic resistance to the temptation of turning the story into a trilogy. team.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Eleven-year-old Lale has no real name, no parents, no roots, and, outcast from her adoptive village, no future except what she can forge for herself. She finds a home and a mother of sorts, with Makina, the Despotana of Tamurin. Lale enters Makina's school for orphan girls and, excelling in her studies, gains "Mother" Makina's favor. At 18, she is sent to Mother's secret school in the mountains to be trained as an assassin, and from there as a spy to neighboring Bethiya. Mother's deepest desire, you see, is to avenge the death of her baby boy by murdering Terem, Bethiya's Sun Lord and leader. Bound by deadly sorcery to be loyal to Mother, Lale becomes Terem's mistress. All goes according to plan until Lale falls in love with Terem and discovers that Mother has allied with a powerful enemy king to ensure Bethiya's downfall. Now Lale must find a way to save Terem and Bethiya, though she risks certain death in the attempt. An exciting, tumultuous coming-of-age story with an edgy heroine. Paula Luedtke
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

See all Editorial Reviews

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 464 pages
  • Publisher: Eos; 1st edition (December 24, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0380978032
  • ISBN-13: 978-0380978038
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.2 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,666,051 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

25 Reviews
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Far Away Places With Strange Sounding Names, May 22, 2003
The Assassins of Tamurin is a fantasy novel about politics and love. More than twenty-four centuries ago, the "Durdana came in ships from a snowy land far across the sea and sailed far up the Pearl River until we found the place appointed for us ... There we built our first villages in what was to become ... our realm, Durdane." Thirteen centuries ago, the Founder established the chief city, Seyhan the Luminous. Then, a century ago, the Exiles came through Jugen Pass, fought for a warring Emperor, and then turned against him to conquer half of Durdana. The remainder is split into an imperial successor state, Bethiya, and ten Despotates. When the leader of the Exiles died, the conquered part of Durdana is divided into six Exile kingdoms.

Bethiya is ruled by the Sun Lords. Several years previously, the two great bloodlines in Bethiya, the Danjians and the Tanyelis, fought at the Water Terrace of the Sun Lord's palace and killed off most of the males in both families. The Chancellor at that time, Halis Geray, persuaded the Council of Ministers to select someone from another bloodline as Sun Lord. Terem Rathai was choosen because he was from a distinguished military family which had dwindled to a very few; in order to reduce favoritism, one condition for receiving the throne was that all his relatives, except his mother, would be banned from Kurjain, the capital city.

In this novel, Lale is an eleven year old orphaned girl living with foster parents in Riversong, a small village at the end of the road. One day, she is sent with the communal sewing needles to the Bee Goddess's priestess, but loses them crossing a creek. When she returns, she is almost killed by her foster parents and neighbors before the village priest can stop the beating. They sentence her to Negation -- i.e., everyone acts as if she does not exist -- but food and water is left out for her use. At first she enjoys the rest and freedom, but later she begins to feel lonely and disassociated from village life and realizes that she must leave or die. She announces her intentions and needs to the village and they just happen to leave a few supplies lying around for her to take.

On the road to elsewhere, she briefly encounters Master Lim, who is a traveling bard, and renews their acquaintance, but he is killed by bandits. After they steal almost everything and leave, she lays out Master Lim and continues on her way. She soon meets a party of soldiers escorting a woman and three girls. The woman is Makina Seval, the Despotana of Tamurin, and she invites Lale to join her school for orphans in Chiran. There the Despotana adopts her, gives her the surname Navari, and assigns her a birthday, as she has done for each orphan in the school. Moreover, she assigns a tutor to teach her to read and then places her in classes.

Part of her training has been the history of Durdana, taught by the Despotana, with emphasis on the death of the Despotana's child at the Water Terrace. She explains to the girls that the wicked Chancellor encouraged the evil Tanyelis to butcher her husband's family and her child, the future Sun Lord. She also points out that the current Sun Lord is a usurper. She encourages them to hate the Chancellor and the current Sun Lord, but ensures that they will never to tell anyone else how she and they feel.

Six years later, Lale completes her schooling and, even though exempted as a girl, takes the Universal Examination, on which she does very well. After the school completion ceremony, the Despotana gives each girl a choice of careers, but Lale has to choose between apprenticing with the Tradition Tutoress or serving the Moon Lady at Three Springs. Moreover, she cannot remain with her best friend, Dilara, if she studies to replace the Tradition Tutoress. Both resignly choose Three Springs, but find out after they arrive that it is really a school for spies and assassins.

After years of training at Three Springs, Lale is sent to Master Luasin's acting school in Istana. Months later, Lale travels as an apprentice with the Elder Company to Kurjain, where she has been ordered to gain the attention of the Sun Lord. She closely resembles his newly dead wife, so she makes the resemblance a matter of general gossip. Terem sends for her after hearing reports of her appearance. They spend a hour or two every few days just discussing a wide range of topics and gradually they fall in love. Eventually she becomes his Inamorata, less than a wife and more that a mistress.

In their discussions, Terem describes his plans to restore the former lands and unity of the old Empire. With her training in political affairs, she realizes that he may be the only one who can accomplish this and, without such unity, Durdana is doomed to either fade away or fall to the Exile kingdoms. Her love for her homeland is conflicting with her love for the Despotana. Then she discovers who her family had been.

This novel strongly resembles a classical Chinese tale of the Time of Troubles and the invasion of the nomad hordes, but it also reflects the landscapes and urban scenes of Renaissance Venice and the Netherlands. It is a tale of exotic places, with strange sounding names. It is a romance that doesn't dwell upon love, yet the various loves in Lale's life -- Durdana itself, the Despotana, and Terem -- produce her turmoil of conflicting emotions.

The story flows well, with most plot twists hinted well ahead of time. Even the actions of Nilang, the Despotana's sorceress, are consistent throughout the tale. The story is also filled with descriptions of sights and smells, so that the reader can easily imagine the surroundings. It is apparent that the authors are not rank amateurs at writing fantasy. I certainly hope that they continue writing in this field.

Highly recommended to anyone who enjoys tales of foreign climes, desperate adventures, and divided loyalties.

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars beautifully written novel, January 22, 2003
No spoiling the story here!

This novel is excellent. It is not only well written, it is also exciting and rich in its details. For the first half of the book, I was able to savor it slowly, absorbing information as it was given, and tantalized by the hints that all was not as it seemed (as the book is narrated by a future Lale who knows the true meaning of things). The second half of the book I read a breakneck speed as all the things that had been hinted at and suggested began to make sense, and the pace of events sped faster and faster. It was a great sweeping ending all the more so for the depth of the development that had preceded it. I would have liked a map, and at times was tempted to try and draw my own to keep the different countries/provinces straight, but otherwise an excellent book.

This is a book that would be appropriate for an advanced younger teen reader or mid-teens and beyond, there is violence, scary monsters, and no explicit sexual scenes.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Engaging and Enthralling!, December 23, 2003
This is not your typical fantasy book. There are no elves or dragons, lost heirs to a throne, or magical artifacts. Here is a thrilling tale about a spy who journeys deep into enemy territory and discovers that the world may not be as she first believed. As a reader you are pulled along on her adventure, sharing in her covert discoveries, hard-won triumphs, and puzzling revelations. You thrill along with her at the fear of discovery, and speculate as she does on her dawning new awakening.

The author has her character speak in a first person narrative which very effectively draws the reader in and makes you feel like you are sharing in the secrets and discoveries that she imparts as the tale unfolds. There is a certain amount of foreshadowing and implied doom which builds suspense and makes this book a real page-turner. Lale is a likeable, believable character - blunt, brave, and sometimes arrogant, but never once does she come across as stereotypical or contrived like some "strong" heroines can.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book and consider it a definite keeper on my bookshelf.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars sniff sniff
Fab idea for a book - love the assasin story and the lost orphan bit. I also love the use of language to express light, surroundings and scenery but then it disintegrated into... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Melia_neechan

2.0 out of 5 stars Eh
The best thing The Assassins of Tamurin has going for it is its descriptive style; words and descriptions flow and hypnotize and capture light and beauty in such a way that one... Read more
Published 23 months ago by Cruciverbalist

5.0 out of 5 stars Masterful Writing!
This book definitely goes on my shelf of favorites to be read over and over. From beginning to end, it was hard to put down. Read more
Published on January 3, 2007 by Georgianna M. Bergeron

5.0 out of 5 stars S.D. Tower is very talented
This book was great! I loved it! I read the other reviews written for this book, and some of them mentioned that the plot takes place in ancient China. Read more
Published on September 7, 2005 by jack'olantern

5.0 out of 5 stars Could not put it down!
From S.D. Tower is a story full of suspense, twists and turns, romance, tragedy, the bondage of friendship, the gratitude and love of a daughter to a mother, betrayal, justice,... Read more
Published on September 2, 2005 by meli-melo-melissa

5.0 out of 5 stars Great read, couldn't put it down
I thought this novel was excellent, and rather well told. It begins slowly, but as you read on, events pick up their pace, and you find yourself on the edge of your seat, reading... Read more
Published on September 2, 2005 by jello

5.0 out of 5 stars Loved it!
The Assassins of Tamurin is full of adventure, drama and romance. The plot is full of twists and turns, and one could see the story thickening as you read. Read more
Published on September 2, 2005 by sharon snow

4.0 out of 5 stars Great plot but could have been written so much better!
I loved this book after the first few pages, and I couldn't put it down. The story is set in Ancient China in a poor village where the young girl Lale lives. Read more
Published on May 24, 2005 by Kaira

3.0 out of 5 stars I was expecting better.
I was somewhat disappointed in this book, I have to say. When I read the reviews and the back cover, I was expecting to find an exciting, if long, book. Read more
Published on April 30, 2005 by Willow and Jasmine

4.0 out of 5 stars A Great Read
Instead of waiting its turn patiently on my "to be read" pile of books, this novel set up a hue and cry that was not to be ignored. Read more
Published on January 30, 2005 by Naomi DeBruyn

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