oyceter: Stack of books with text "mmm... books!" (mmm books)
And now, I confess to my flist that I think Bujold is just Not For Me. I read The Curse of Chalion a couple of years ago and wasn't too impressed. I've read most of Komarr and Cordelia's Honor, largely because people have told me that Cordelia's Honor is one of her earliest and therefore not best works. Both of the Miles books I ended up putting down when I was smackdab in the middle of the climactic plot moments, and I've never felt the need to pick them back up again.

Bujold being Not For Me is not just "I admire it technically but don't quite understand and maybe a reread will convince me otherwise." I think it's something about her prose or her characters that slides right off me.

Anyway. Ista is the middle-aged mother of the queen; her life has previously been torn apart by the will of the gods, and she's really not all that open to them anymore. She embarks on a pilgrimage, largely to get away from court life, but ends up entangled in a mess of demons and conspiracies in which the gods are trying to guide her to do something.

I like that Ista is a middle-aged heroine and that she's allowed to have second chances and love again. Other than that, I was mostly bored by the book. Despite Ista's horrific past and the presence of demons in this book, I never felt that she or any of the other characters were really in any danger. And I could have put this down at the giant climactic moment and not felt any need to pick it back up again, which is never a good sign.

I'm really not sure what it is. Part of me wants to say that Bujold's characters feel too well adjusted to me; I know people will come in and talk about Miles and how much angst he goes through, but there's something about the prose or the way it's written that doesn't make the angst feel real to me. Ah well.

Links:
- [livejournal.com profile] coffeeandink's review
- [livejournal.com profile] truepenny's review (spoilery)
- [livejournal.com profile] rilina's review
oyceter: Stack of books with text "mmm... books!" (mmm books)
Stayed up much, much too late last night finishing this, and then suddenly realized that it wasn't that spectacularly good.

I did like it, and it was a nice return to solid, world-building fantasy, a subgenre of which I find I'm reading less and less of now. [livejournal.com profile] melymbrosia remarks in her review of Paladin of Souls that Bujold doesn't ever let her protagonists suffer too much for their mistakes, and I think that's the thing that I keep picking at in my head that makes this good, but not satisfying. This is particularly evident because I read it right after Fool's Fate.

Another thing that struck me was how corporeal the gods in this world were, how one could pray for things and have them granted and how real it was when they talked of things like miracles and saints. I'm not quite sure why that felt so peculiar to me; it's not as though fantasy is replete of gods or anything -- witness the David Eddings books and the Kushiel books, among many. I suppose with the Spanish influence, it felt a little more like a Guy Gavriel Kay book, which, outside of the Fionavar Tapestry, treats gods and religion much as they are in the real world. I enjoyed the setting, although I think I would have more with more detail and more depth -- I still don't think I have a good feel for the world outside of the five-god religion of theirs, no solid grip on the culture or the psychology or something that makes it different than just a Spanish-influenced fantasy world.

I very much enjoyed Cazaril and his age and his feel of having gone through too much. I particularly liked how he wasn't the fresh young boy from the village ala so many epic fantasies, brained by the fact that he was a bona fide hero out to save the world or stunned with the notion that he had some sort of epic destiny. I liked his acceptance of things and his fierce protectiveness toward his ladies. Lady Betriz was a bit meh for me -- didn't quite get as good of a sense of her personality, but I very much adored headstrong, smart Iselle. I am a sucker for a heroine who can play politics/court maneuvering.

More on Bujold protecting her protagonists here, with spoilers )

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