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Sethra Lavode
 
 

Sethra Lavode [Mass Market Paperback]

Steven Brust
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 10.99
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From Publishers Weekly

In Brust's stylish conclusion to his Viscount of Adrilankha trilogy (after 2003's Lord of Castle Black and 2002's Paths of the Dead), which pays homage to Dumas père's D'Artagnan swashbucklers, Empress Zerika the Fourth tries to consolidate her hold on the realm, but her challenger, Kâna, isn't ready to give up the fight. The last desperate days of the battle for the Dragaeran Empire feature plenty of magic and intrigue, and fans are forewarned that some of the lovable characters from past installments won't survive. As before, nobles converse in absurdly stilted dialogue, while the humor is sharp enough at times to induce outright laughter. Inventive chapter headings (e.g., "How Morrolan, Attempting to Find a God, Found Instead What His Sword Could Do") add to the faux period feel. For full understanding of all the heroics, newcomers may want to start with the author's two prequels, The Phoenix Guards (1991) and Five Hundred Years After (1994).
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

The conclusion to Brust's Dumas-indebted Khaavren series includes all the action, romance, and pathos of its predecessors The Phoenix Guards (1991), Five Hundred Years After (1994), The Paths of the Dead (2002), and The Lord of the Castle Black [BKL Ag 03], and fleshes out the pasts of the Dragaeran Empire and the legendary Sethra Lavode. The Phoenix Zerika has reclaimed the Imperial Orb from the Paths of the Dead and now means to reestablish the empire, in chaos since Adron's disaster. But through conquest and diplomacy, Dragonlord Kana has risen to control about half the territory of the old empire, and he intends to wrest the orb from Zerika, even if it means allying with powers that hate Dragaerans. Old enmities, new sorcery, capricious gods, and inimical powers clash in a climactic battle for the throne. Said battle--indeed, the whole book--may not be irresistable for readers starting Brust or the Khaavren saga, but there's no denying Brust's fine pacing and worldbuilding and his sheer pizzazz. Frieda Murray
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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On the ground floor of Whitecrest Manor was a wide enclosed terrace, the twin to the open terrace on the other side where the Count of Countess of Whitecrest were accustomed to take their morning klava and watch the ocean. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Brust as Paarfi: The Last Chapter, April 19 2004
By 
James D. DeWitt "Alaska Fan" (Fairbanks, AK United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Sethra Lavode (Hardcover)
With "Sethra Lavode," Brust brings the "Viscount of Adrilankha" series to a conclusion. And, perhaps, the larger Khaavren stories begun with "The Phoenix Guards" as well. But before turning to "Sethra" some background is probably appropriate.

The entire Khaavren trilogy, of course, was written by Paarfi, who redefines the word "prolix" with each page he writes. Brust is merely something like a translator. There were times when his translations were stretched in "Viscount" and especially "Castle Black," the two earlier books, but in "Sethra" there is a return to the wonderful style of "Phoenix Guards" and "500 Years." This book moves along, without ever giving up the narrative conceit and tone.

As for the plot, in "Viscount," the Empress Zerika recovered the Imperial Orb; in "500 Years" she fought to claim the throne; in "Sethra" she must fight to keep it against a Pretender and the deadly machinations of his fellow plotters. Our heros have managed to accumulate considerable number of enemies across the four earlier books. And those enemies have all allied together in a final effort to defeat Empress Zerika, Khaavren, Aerich, Pel and Tazendra.

I'm unsure whether to call these books a pastiche or homage to Alexander Dumas; perhaps they are something of both. Brust . . . er, Paarfi, pokes immense fun at himself. Brust has written elsewhere that writing as Paarfi is great fun, and Brust's enjoyment and delight is apparent. Where Dumas verbosity was a consequence being paid by the word, Brust. . . er, Paarfi writes for his own pleasure and the pleasure of an attentive reader. And for the sly knife in the ribs. For example, in "500 Years" Paarfi notes that the decadent Phoenix Emperor, Tortaalik, changes his clothes 8-10 times a day, but that since there were already several books written on the Emperor's dress, he wouldn't write another. So much for Robert Jordan.

As others have noted, the narrative is delightfully infuriating. Paarfi thinks nothing of interrupting the story at a critical pound to expound - at length - on whatever has crossed his mind or his path. I caution that if you think "irony" describes rusty water, much of these tales will be lost on you.

One other nice touch: many of the events of the "Viscount" trilogy have been foreshadowed in the "Taltos" series, which is itself some ten books long now. Brust manages to keep these stories consistent with those books, which are slightly later in time, without ever sacrificing excitement or consistency.

Kudos to Brust. . . er. Paarfi, on a story well told and well concluded. Kudos to Tor on having the courage to publish these tales, which in several senses are well outside the normal fantasy/science fiction genre. Strongly recommended.

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4.0 out of 5 stars a satisfying conclusion, Jun 14 2004
By 
Mike Garrison (Covington, WA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Sethra Lavode (Hardcover)
While this is sold as the third book in a trilogy, it is really the third part of a single novel. Past Kaavhren Romances have started slowly, introducing a lot of characters and plot threads, then picked up in the middle, and finally come together in a definitive ending. This story (The Viscount Of Adrilankha) is exactly the same, except those three portions of the novel are split between three books. The first (Paths Of The Dead) therefore suffered greatly, because it was slow and had no payoff. The second (Lord Of Castle Black) was more entertaining, but also had no payoff. That was because the payoff comes in the third book.

Much is learned regarding the relationship between Love, Duty, Honor, and Friendship. A father learns that he can love his son without necessarily understanding or approving of everything he does. An empress learns the value of subjects who respect her enough to fail to show her respect. And a dragonlord learns much about his sword, as well as interior decorating and the science of throwing a party.

The reader, however, learns very little about Sethra Lavode, even though she is the lynchpin around which the rest of the plot revolves.

These three books would probably rate five stars if they were published together as a single volume, but individually none of them quite reaches that level. Neither Lord Of Castle Black nor Sethra Lavode can really be read on their own, and Paths Of The Dead really isn't worth reading on its own.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Not about the title character, Jun 3 2004
By 
David Brown (VA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Sethra Lavode (Hardcover)
The book is good. Oh I could nitpick here and there wanting a little more of the Lyorn Ariec's journey, a little more of Verra's judgment reward, a little more danger in the city battle (get past one fort or make a second attempt on the empress). I also don't understand why Morolean did not finish the 4th village, why a few more people were not honnored at the end, or (and this could be the biggest item) the book is titled the way it is when there is no more about Sethra in this book than in many others. The book is the 3rd in a series about a number of characters we like. I almost do think it would be best read immediately after the other two. Nits aside, I laughed out loud several times delighting in the dragerean approach to time and turns of phrases.
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