Entry tags:
Alexander, Lloyd - Westmark Trilogy
(consists of Westmark, The Kestrel, and The Beggar Queen)
I think I may have read The Kestrel a very long time ago in middle school, but I don't really remember a thing about it.
I'm just going to start out by saying the obvious: this is very good. Go read.
I started out being completely not impressed -- while Westmark is in no way a bad book, Alexander's simple style and the fairly typical young adult plot (boy loses old life, finds new life with revolutionaries, meets girl who has a Higher Destiny, etc.) didn't particularly make me see why everyone was reccing the trilogy left and right. The second book is when things really started to pick up, when Alexander begins to go more in depth into the various political issues he briefly glosses over in the first book. And the second and third books are very much political books, books about war and peace and peacemaking, which doesn't seem to be a very common topic in fantasy or young adult books.
The books themselves are written in a very dry tone of voice -- I never got overly emotionally involved with the characters, which was probably good, given the subject matter. But the author still manages to make certain scenes touching and others very funny, all while keeping a bit of narrative distance.
What I liked the most was how Alexander never tried to offer me any easy answers. An idealistic revolutionary could also be the country's worst enemy, even if the ideology he spouted was of the good. And even those starting with the best intentions in running the country would be sidetracked by grey areas. Alexander ends the trilogy on the right note too (imho), and the path he decides to take isn't one that I think many authors would. But I'm glad he did, and I'm very glad I ended up reading these.
Also, it doesn't hurt that Mickle was cool ;).
Links:
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rilina's reviews of Westmark, The Kestrel, and The Beggar Queen
I think I may have read The Kestrel a very long time ago in middle school, but I don't really remember a thing about it.
I'm just going to start out by saying the obvious: this is very good. Go read.
I started out being completely not impressed -- while Westmark is in no way a bad book, Alexander's simple style and the fairly typical young adult plot (boy loses old life, finds new life with revolutionaries, meets girl who has a Higher Destiny, etc.) didn't particularly make me see why everyone was reccing the trilogy left and right. The second book is when things really started to pick up, when Alexander begins to go more in depth into the various political issues he briefly glosses over in the first book. And the second and third books are very much political books, books about war and peace and peacemaking, which doesn't seem to be a very common topic in fantasy or young adult books.
The books themselves are written in a very dry tone of voice -- I never got overly emotionally involved with the characters, which was probably good, given the subject matter. But the author still manages to make certain scenes touching and others very funny, all while keeping a bit of narrative distance.
What I liked the most was how Alexander never tried to offer me any easy answers. An idealistic revolutionary could also be the country's worst enemy, even if the ideology he spouted was of the good. And even those starting with the best intentions in running the country would be sidetracked by grey areas. Alexander ends the trilogy on the right note too (imho), and the path he decides to take isn't one that I think many authors would. But I'm glad he did, and I'm very glad I ended up reading these.
Also, it doesn't hurt that Mickle was cool ;).
Links:
-
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And yes, Mickle was cool. But I'm really a sucker for Keller. How can you not love Old Kasperl?
Spoilers for Beggar Queen
My favorites may end up being the water rats though...
Re: Spoilers for Beggar Queen
Re: Spoilers for Beggar Queen
Have you written up either series, by any chance?
Re: Spoilers for Beggar Queen
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(O the night-long elegy of the broken harp! Oh, happy sigh.)
What I always chiefly recalled, from Westmark, is that it starts with an act of violence, on Theo's part. The novel leaps quickly into an adventure-romp, but always behind it lies this unease of the police state. In another kind of book, Florian's attack on the garrison would be monstrously out of place, but in a book that begins with the hero bashing in someone's brains, it was a logical thing to have happen.
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I also love how the consequences of violence linger. You see, especially in opening chapters of The Beggar Queen, how Theo and company are still paying the piper for the choices they made for good and ill at Nierkeeping.
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I love that part! :sigh happily as well: (I think that happy sighs, like yawns, are catching.)
I should go back and reread Westmark, since I haven't read them since junior high or high school and they didn't grab me back then the way the Prydain books did.
how funny!
And even though this may be blasphemous, I have always preferred the epic scope and fantasy/history that Alexander's Prydain Chronicles provided over JRR Tolkien's Lord of the Rings. Though I know if it wasn't for Tolkien, the Prydain Chronicles may never have existed. It's mostly the language that wins me over to Alexander everytime - plus Eilowny? Possibly my first crush on a fictional female character.
Re: how funny!
Eilowny is awesome.
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(I'm sure I'll like them enough to buy them eventually, since I love Prydain, but I'm trying not to buy any books for the rest of the year. I think even two months of no bookbuying is going to be a test of my willpower.)
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Sadly, two weeks of no bookbuying is a test of my willpower. *sigh*
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