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Prince of Storms (The Entire and the Rose, Book 4) Paperback – August 24, 2010
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- Print length440 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPyr
- Publication dateAugust 24, 2010
- Dimensions6.06 x 0.83 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101616142057
- ISBN-13978-1616142056
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About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Pyr; 1st edition (August 24, 2010)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 440 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1616142057
- ISBN-13 : 978-1616142056
- Item Weight : 1.17 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.06 x 0.83 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #4,277,403 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #28,486 in Space Operas
- #48,347 in Science Fiction Adventures
- #171,504 in American Literature (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Kay Kenyon is the author of sixteen fantasy and science fiction novels. Her most recent work is The Girl Who Fell Into Myth, book one of a high fantasy series based in myth, multiple realms, and the crossings that connect them. The next book in The Arisen Worlds series is Stranger in the Twisted Realm, coming in September, 2023 and now on pre-order. Four books are planned. "A story of powers and magic on a grand scale. A series to treasure.” —Louisa Morgan, author of The Great Witch of Brittany.
Her work has been shortlisted for the Philip K. Dick award, the John W. Campbell Memorial award, and the American Library Reading List award. Her previous fantasy series, The Dark Talents, has been optioned for film. She is a founding member of Write on the River, an organization that encourages aspiring writers.
She lives in beautiful eastern Washington State in the foothills of the Cascades. Contact her at https://www.kaykenyon.com, and join her newsletter for all the news about upcoming releases, price discounts, and reader perks.
OTHER FANTASY NOVELS:
A Thousand Perfect Things
Queen of the Deep
~The Dark Talents series~
At the Table of Wolves, Book 1
Serpent in the Heather, Book 2
Nest of the Monarch, Book 3
SELECTED SCIENCE FICTION NOVELS:
The Seeds of Time
Tropic of Creation
Rift
Maximum Ice (P.K. Dick finalist)
The Braided World (John W, Campbell finalist)
SF SHORT STORY COLLECTIONS:
Dystopia: Seven Dark and Hopeful tales
Worlds Near and Far
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Prince of Storms: 4/5
The Good: Absolutely unique world-building that combines science fiction and fantasy elements and continues to grow throughtout the entire series; Carefully plotted narrative that spans and evolves over four volumes; The world is exceptionally well integrated into the narrative rather than being adjacent to it.
The Bad: Early volumes have problems with jarring perspective changes; Worldbuilding often uses infodumping rather than in-narrative elements; The story isn't well segmented into individual novels, leaving readers with an all-or-none decision.
The Review: Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." Rarely is this truer than in Kay Kenyon's science fiction/fantasy hybrid quadrilogy. An undeniable triumph of world building split into four books, The Entire and the Rose is 1700 pages of complex characters and intricate narrative. The events of the series revolve around Titus Quinn, the first denizen of the Rose (our universe) to cross through into The Entire, a complex infinite world constructed by the harsh, alien Tarig and inhabited by a number of races of their creation. Several years before the series begins, Quinn and his wife and daughter were pulled into the Entire when the ship he was piloting broke apart mid-wormhole jump. Quinn returns months later in our time with no family and little recollection of what happened despite living in the Entire for over a decade. When science proves that his ravings about a second reality may in fact be true, Quinn returns to the Entire in search of his missing wife and daughter and to explore what, if any, benefit The Entire may offer Earth. As Quinn quickly becomes embroiled in the politics of the world he left behind, it becomes obvious that much more is at stake than the fate of his family. The plot only gets more complex from there, the majority of which takes place in the profoundly strange world of the Entire, although the story does take place in both universes.
To provide any more detail than that would ruin the game-changing revelations that occur frequently throughout the series, shifting plots and loyalties in unexpected but exciting ways. There are several power players on both sides of the divide and rarely is there any way of knowing who is playing who. If the Earth universe is referred to as the Rose, the other universe labeled as the Entire might be better known as the Onion. From the start of the series to the final pages, Kenyon slowly peels back layer after layer of world building, unveiling an amazingly concocted world. Religion, politics, cultural divides, a forever war, teenage cults, complex transit systems: the facets of the Entire go on and on. Kenyon details aspect after aspect of her created universe and she does an unbelievable job of unobtrusively bringing the elements she has previously cultivated back into the main plot.
It's a rare occurence but if anything there is almost too much world building. The Entire is inhabited by a number of races and species all of which are fairly unique when compared to the genre standards. However, a few of these races are almost superfluous, with not a single primary or secondary character coming from their ranks. Kenyon could have either edited them out or integrated them into the story as well as she did the primary species of Humans, Chalin, Tarig, Inyx, Hirrin, and Paion. The cultural depth of these imagined races is continually capitalized upon by Kenyon and as a result the few species that don't get starring roles ultimately fall to the wayside.
While the extraneous elements could have been handled better, the world of the Entire and the thoroughly constructed characters that inhabit it are the main attractions of the series. Kenyon's writing, on the other hand, leaves a little bit to be desired especially in the early volumes. Kenyon writes from an extremely tight third person perspective and she has an unfortunate tendency to jump perspectives mid-scene without warning, generating confusion and necessitating rereading just to confirm which character was thinking what. Kenyon gets better at this as the books go on but early on these jarring transitions occur disappointingly often especially considering a small change symbol (which is often used to switch perspectives between scenes) could have easily been used to remedy this problem. As the books progress, Kenyon does manage to reduce the frequency with which these occur. The third and fourth volumes are much stronger than the first in this regard.
Kenyon also has a propensity to take a "tell not show" approach to her worldbuilding and while the world is interesting enough, there is no in-narrative reason for the characters to lecture the way they do. Consequently, the books of The Entire and The Rose read somewhat slowly. While not a bad thing in and of itself, these are not necessarily beach reads and due to the complex nature of the world and plot, it should be read in its entirety for full effect, commanding a significant time investment on the part of the reader.
Additionally, it is important to bear in mind that this epic series would be best described as science fantasy. While Kenyon maintains the premise that all of the places and structures of her world are science-based, the science satisfies Clarke's axiom and is indistinguishable from magic. Anyone who goes into this series expecting to understand the physics underpinning the world will be sorely disappointed. Despite the trappings of science that frame the Entire, at its core it's a fantasy world; it exists and behaves the way it does because the story dictates the way it does. But it works and it works well.
Here are some notes specific to Prince of Storms
Prince of Storms: In the concluding volume of the series, Kenyon manages to wrap up the numerous threads of The Entire and The Rose while continuing to grow her characters in the face of new challenges. At first the final volume feels likes it would just be a prolonged epilogue especially after the spectacular ending of A City Without End but it's clear that Kenyon has a few more tricks up her sleeve. Prince of Storms takes a more fantastical approach to the Entire, taking advantage of some of the more unexplained intricacies of the Entire to raise the stakes once again. Reading the final book made it extremely clear how well Kenyon had planned out the entire series. Things that seemed to be throw away lines in the first two volumes were brought full circle, adding an appreciated cohesion to the story and lending credence to the final climax. Prince of Storms ends the series on a strong note, leaving the readers with a robust narrative that doesn't leave the door open for future derivative adventures.
Ultimately, The Entire and The Rose is more than a sum of its composite volumes, so much so that it was too difficult to reach a conclusion on one book before reading the others. The story flows through the pages like one of the arms of the Nigh (a river of exotic matter from the story), bearing strongly motivated characters through alternating periods of slow progress and torrential action. The narrative twists and turns unexpectedly, creating new letters to place between points A and B. At the core of Kenyon's series is her imagined Entire, rivaling any fantasy world for its complexity and surpassing the vast majority for sheer inventiveness. Despite some missteps in presentation, Kay Kenyon's The Entire and The Rose has created a unique science fantasy series that is worth reading, well, in its entirety.
We are repeatedly told about the Entire with its elastic distances and glowing sky but somehow there is still a sense of location, of scenery, a tactile feeling of size and place that is mostly lacking. Maybe more sensory references would help. Also we are told about characters' emotions but sometimes they are hard to feel. In particular I just never quite felt the Ji Anzi/Titus bond, or the Tarig-human romances.
And there is a multiplicity of sentient races featured but by this fourth book the author does not bother to describe their salient characteristics, so unless you remember such details from previous volumes it is hard to think of them as other than humans. Again here some kind of sensory references might be helpful. Surely all sentients do not, for example, smell, or sound, the same. Would it hurt to at least give some visual pointers as to individuals' appearances?
The "magic" of the Tarig's great construction is never really explained, nor the origin/creation of the various sentient races they placed into the Entire. Maybe I missed it but where did the Paion originate? Surely this kind of stuff is at least as interesting to the SF portion of the readership as who betrays or sleeps with who.
Finally, probably it's intentional to some extent but I find the entire epic infused with a bittersweetness, a sense that we're in a slightly-twisted alternate world where, no matter what the characters do, things can never really be OK or work out right. This point of view is a central theme and no group is immune from it. Of course it's the author's right to create the setting as she wishes, but I strongly feel machinations behind the curtain. I would tend to want more of the technical things explained a little more as any logical beings would be demanding to know. And the author, omniscient web-weaver, could perhaps show more compassion (or dare I say, humanity) in how she handles her created world. Maybe in the next epic!

