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The Last Light of the Sun
 
 

The Last Light of the Sun [Hardcover]

Guy Gavriel Kay
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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Amazon.ca Canadian Essential

From his very first books, the trilogy known as the Fionavar Tapestry, Guy Gavriel Kay was recognized as one of the world's finest and most innovative writers working with the fantasy tradition. In later works he has taken on, with striking success, an alternative history of Europe, which reached a pinnacle with 2004's The Lost Light of the Sun. Set at the hinge moment of Britain's Alfred the Great's enlightened reign (he's known as Aeldred in Kay's parallel Europe), Lost Light is a drama of cultural clash and change in a world shadowed by the presence of faerie but deeply engaged with human questions of ethics and honour.

Amazon.ca

In the often formulaic world of fantasy fiction, Guy Gavriel Kay stands out as an innovative and challenging writer. He not only pushes the genre's limits with his unique blend of high fantasy and historical fiction, he also expands his own boundaries as a writer by constantly exploring new directions. The Last Light of the Sun is no exception, as Kay leaves the courtly world of his recent novels for a harsh northern land populated with marauding sea raiders, grim kings struggling to establish some semblance of civilization, and a slowly dying faerie world. The Last Light of the Sun invokes the Britain of the Old English sagas, in which community is built upon honour and loyalty, and the end of the world is always but a battle away.

The book follows a large cast of characters from three different societies: the Viking stand-in Erlings, the Celtic Cyngael, and the Anglo Saxon-like Anglcyn. The three groups clash repeatedly and become more closely intertwined in each meeting, as characters fight, fall in love, and die, and complex family stories and quests are played out across generations and different landscapes. What makes the book truly remarkable is Kay's honest, unsentimental storytelling style. The characters in The Last Light of the Sun are real people, not stock fantasy characters, and the plot often takes unexpected, unconventional twists, resulting in a chain of events that more closely resembles real history than romantic tales. The Last Light of the Sun is one of Kay's bleaker works, largely because it's also one of his most real. But it is still an epic tale, and like the best epics it depicts not only heroes and mighty battles but also patterns of loss and change. It is a world upon which the sun is truly setting, but it is also a world about to be reborn into a new era, and Kay tells its story like the best bards of old. --Peter Darbyshire


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Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kay does it again, Feb 27 2004
This review is from: The Last Light of the Sun (Hardcover)
Once again, I am impressed by Canada's Master of Fantasy, Guy Gavriel Kay. As with previous tales, Kay has created a work of wonder.
The Last Light of the Sun is a tale of three cultures, the Cyngael, the Anglcyns, and the Erlings. Through the eyes of these peoples, Kay weaves a tapestry of sorrow and joy that is deserving of the highest accolades.
I will not give away any of the story. I will only say that this is a book that should be read and enjoyed by anyone who has ever read a book.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I loved this book., Mar 6 2004
By 
Wendy E. Middleton "Booklvr" (Barrie, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Last Light of the Sun (Hardcover)
I have read all of Guy Gavriel Kay's novels and I have loved every one. The Last Light of the Sun is even better than most of them. I like the combination of real history and his parallel universe. Kay does not try to hide the fact that King Aeldred of Anglcyn is really Alfred the Great. But this is history with the additional twist of fantasy. Before I read The Summer Tree (Kay's first novel), I did not read most fantasy, other than The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit, which I had read in adolescence. It took the strong persuasion of a good friend and a trusted student to get me to try that book. I soon realized that Kay's novels were very different than the stereotypical genre novels I had associated with fantasy. Kay writes well and draws upon a strong literary background in his work.

Aside from the compelling story-telling and the strongly drawn characters, the aspect I loved most about The Last Light of the Sun is the faeries. In fact I wish that the unnamed faery who meets with Alun was present in more scenes. Kay is drawing strongly on the English and Celtic tradition here, not just for his historical detail.

I do have one complaint about this book (and would actually have given it four and one-half stars had this rating existed) and that is the authorial intrusion. At times the narrator admittedly manipulates the story, telling the tales of peripheral characters and commenting on the development of the plot. I liked this technique in Milan Kundera's The Unbearable Lightness of Being. However, these traditional tales need a more traditional narrative and Kay's attempt to interfere with that style annoyed me, but only a bit.

I would like to see a sequel to this book to follow the stories of the young characters. Particularly I think the bond between Alun and Kendra deserves another novel.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Another GGKay triumph, April 10 2011
By 
Brian Ashe "Fantast" (Ottawa, Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
GG Kay is one of my favorite authors. His The Lion of Al Rassan is an amazing adaptation of El Cid. His Sarantium novels are great. Ysabel is strange. But this novel, incorporating Alfred's England with the Vikings, Iceland, and territories west, is one of the best. Excellent characters, who develop during the story, settings that are believable, fantasy magic according to the setting and the times, and a strong story line. Add to that a strong sense of the languages, both modern English and those of the time, and what's not to like? I will continue to read this man's writing, as long as he writes and I can read.
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