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4.0étoiles sur 5
Blood Sorceress, Book One, Avril 17 2009
Yvaine of Braedun burned in 1642. Before her death the witch put her blood sorceress knowledge deep within her blood servant, Jax, and sent him to locate her successor. Jax searched for well over a century.
Miss Amanusa Whitcomb is a healer who wants justice for her murdered family. Upon Jax locating her, Amanusa uses her newfound blood magic to extract justice for the innocent blood. Amanusa and Jax flee Austria with their enemies in pursuit. They travel to France where the magician conclave is being held in emergency session. The main topic is how to stop the dead zones from spreading. The arrival of the first blood sorceress in over two hundred years sets the conclave on its ear.
The dead zones are areas where all magic has died. Once magic dies, so too does earth, wildlife, and people. Only strange metallic beings composed of anti-magic reside in the dead zones. Amanusa and Jax grow emotionally closer as they aid their fellow magicians in battling the ever expanding zones. At the same time, they must deal with the enemies due to show up and with some prejudiced magicians.
**** This story has a Regency era setting but magic seems to be commonplace. Blood magic is not dark magic. It is actually the most innocent, truthful, and powerful of the four great magics. Passion may be used for blood magic as well, so readers will find a couple of steamy sections later in the story. However, the art of crafting magic is always the main focus of the story. An interesting mix of history, romance and fantasy, I found this story to be superb! ****
Reviewed by Detra Fitch of Huntress Reviews.
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3.0étoiles sur 5
A good start to, I'm hoping, a new series..., Déc 22 2008
Jax has been looking endlessly for the previous blood sorceress's successor, one who would unleash the knowledge Yvaine had stored in his mind, the magic in his body.
Amanusa lost her family at a very young age, was raped and beated repeatedly since, and has lost a huge chunk of herself. When Jax approaches, she doesn't believe him and sends him on his way, for a woman in Romania is forbidden to perform any sort of magic. Jax has to find a way to convince Amanusa that she is a blood sorceress, and when she unknowingly uses the biggest of spells against the men who hurt her, killing them, she has no choice now but to flee to France with Jax.
Between "dead zones" and having to dodge those would wish them dead, arriving in France should be a means of safety. But none of it ends there. From performing magic to contain a "dead zone" from becoming bigger, to being face to face with the one man, above all others, who want her dead, Amanuza and Jax face their biggest threat and challenge yet.
I'd have to agree with new_user's review (to read her review, click here.) The relationship between Jax and Amanusa builds slowly, with Amanusa needing to learn how to trust a man. Period. Jax learns that Amanusa is in no way like Yvaine, who treated him as most treated servants. Amanusa treats him with more kindness than he even believes he deserves.
Watching their relationship grow was, I think, the highest point in the book. They learn about themselves as well as each other, and it grows from trust, grudgingly to love, until both realize they can't live without the other, regardless of a blood bond. What they feel is incredibly much deeper, and both deserve to feel that way. And Amanusa teeters on that fine line between justice and revenge.
I did find that the scene at the rebellion camp to be a bit much - it lasted way too long, and I feared that the entire book was going to play out there. While I could understand that their journey through "dead zones" were played out to keep themselves alive, I wished there was more sexual tension between Amanusa and Jax, especially on her part. Knowing what had happened to her until Jax came along, I wanted to see a bigger fight of her feeling towards Jax in that aspect, not just her heart and mind.
And while I could understand that, in the past, women had a much bigger fight to being equal to men, in all aspects and not just magic, I thing her speach at the end was a little overdone. I think the story would have been just as good with a shorter speech.
And the "dead zones". I really liked that twist. How not just magic, but life, seems to be sucked away until there is nothing left except mechanical machines that want to destroy everything that crosses their path, and that seem to be created by something other than man; no bolts, nuts, soldering are keeping them together. They are seemless . While all sorts of magicks and spells are worked to contain the zones, it took Amanusa's blood magic to combine them, to make the containment spell work.
All in all, I enjoyed the story and I sure do hope that this is the beginning of a series. I'd snag the second book, just to see what else Amanusa learns of her magic and more about the "dead zones", like who, how and what created them. Ms. Dayton, I look forward to reading more from you!
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