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Mistress Of The Pearl
 
 

Mistress Of The Pearl (Mass Market Paperback)

by Eric Van Lustbader (Author) "An exceptionally frigid winter was at last drawing to a close ..." (more)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Fans of bestseller Lustbader will welcome the third hefty installment in his Pearl fantasy series (after 2002's The Veil of a Thousand Tears), with its wildly complex plot, breathless action and jaw-breaking nomenclature (Khagggun, Mesagggun, etc.), though newcomers might wish they had a roadmap. On the planet Kundala, the conquering V'ornn are having trouble subduing the natives, who have a champion in the woman Riane, aka "the Dar Sala-at, the fabled savior, destined to lead the Kundalan uprising against their alien V'ornn oppressors." Meanwhile, Annon, a dead V'ornn whose consciousness survives within Riane, shows that some V'ornn are worthy of the reader's sympathy. Riane's friend Eleana, who loved Annon, finds herself strangely attracted to Riane. The Kundalans' ultimate salvation, however, rests in securing the mystical Pearl. Tolkien's rings (reflected in the Pearl's "banestones") and the pseudo-Islamicism of Herbert's Dune are among the author's many obvious literary influences, while in a display of tongue-in-cheek humor three V'ornn admirals act a bit like the Three Stooges. Lustbader keeps scene-setting to a minimum ("Sapphire evening spread its wings over the great steppe") amid all the fighting and skullduggery. A surprise twist at the end serves as a springboard to a fourth volume.
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

Van Lustbader continues grappling with questions of technological morality in volume 3 of the Pearl. The Ring of the Five Dragons (2001) and The Veil of a Thousand Tears (2002) introduced two races in conflict: the invading V'ornn and the peaceful and spiritual Kundalan, oppressed by the V'ornn for more than a century. The V'ornn exploit Kundala for its resources, but the rarely seen V'ornn rulers, the Gyrgon technomages, have a more ghastly agenda: to genetically reengineer the DNA of mixed Kundalan-V'ornn offspring to produce exceptionally powerful warriors who are part creature, part machine. The reengineering process is far from perfected, and most of the resultant children die hideous, bloody deaths or go mad. Riane, the prophesied Dar-Sala-at, and her companions continue their desperate search for the sacred Pearl, with which she can save Kundala and free her people from the V'ornn. Now she faces the most forbidding task thus far, to wrest control of the banestones from the evil Sauromicians, soulless magicians whose black-magical knowledge is vast and who, having found the ninth and last banestone, will wield all the known power in Kundala. Van Lustbader's engaging novel builds powerfully upon its predecessors, thanks to characters of uncommon depth and complexity, lots of perplexing dilemmas for them to wrestle with, and plenty of exciting swordplay and gore. Paula Luedtke
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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4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Tight, Edgy and Surprisingly Agile -- A Breathtaking Ride, Jun 20 2004
By Bookreporter.com (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mistress of the Pearl (Hardcover)
Whoever said "getting there is half the fun" must have been an avid literary adventure fan. For Eric Van Lustbader's hefty science fiction/fantasy thriller, MISTRESS OF THE PEARL, the intuitive reader should be warned to ratchet up that old maxim to say that getting there provides nearly all the fun.

It's been a while since I've read anything by the justly acclaimed Van Lustbader, so I must confess straight up that the two previous volumes in his epic Pearl saga are not on my have-read shelf. (In retrospect, they should be...) And for Van Lustbader, creative continuity is everything. There's no gentle warm-up, no teacherly recap, no summary of previous highlights. He opens with a shipwreck on the exotic planet of Kundala and you, poor reader, are thrown headfirst into storm-tossed waves to thrash around with everyone else and create some sense of bearing as best you can.

If you've ever traveled to a country where no one spoke your language (and vice-versa), that's the general feeling that results from swimming through the first few dozen pages. Yet you're there, submerged in it, and you don't really want to leave; the alien landscape may seem life threatening, but it's also magnetically alluring. So, like Van Lustbader's enigmatic characters, with their tantalizing and obscure pedigrees, you forge ahead looking for patterns in his intense fabric of inter-species relationships --- and perhaps try to become part of them.

Yes, there is a mystical Pearl that's supposed to set everything right; yes, there is a Mistress, whose authority is all but unrecognized. There's also an omnipotent but maddeningly capricious super-goddess with a supposedly cosmic plan; and of course there are "good" and "bad" forces embodied in a variety of beings, whose motives are not always clear. In short, little or nothing is as it seems and even the characters on the sometimes-fuzzy side of "right" end up entangled in all sorts of moral and political undergrowth.

It's that amazing verbal and imaginative "undergrowth" of Van Lustbader's cosmically vast plot structure that grasps and holds the attention of any reader who appreciates clever imagery, graphic action, and surprisingly disciplined prose in such a long book (nearly 600 pages). In this lush jungle of improbable life, fascinating, frightening and endearing individuals exist side by side in a strange mixture of conflict and detente. In fact, politics alone weave a magical, circuitous web that keeps MISTRESS OF THE PEARL tight, edgy, and surprisingly agile throughout.

By all means, get hold of the preceding RING OF FIVE DRAGONS and VEIL OF A THOUSAND TEARS and read them beforehand if you can. But if MISTRESS OF THE PEARL crosses your path first, take a leap of literary faith into Van Lustbader's vivid universe --- and enjoy a breathtaking ride.

--- Reviewed by Pauline Finch

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5.0 out of 5 stars Worth waiting for!, May 6 2004
By "zette2254" (Edmonton, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mistress of the Pearl (Hardcover)
Many years ago, I read Van Lustbader's Dai-san trilogy and thought...this guy should stick to thrillers. He has a knack. But then his thrillers became stale and formulaic. He has re-invented himself as a writer with the Pearl series, of which, this is the third installment.
Kundala rivals Raymond E. Feist's Midkemia. It is a land of the usual fantasy novel with high-tech thrown in. It's a well-done blend. Characters are well-developed and the dialogue is, at times, highly entertaining....way beyond the usual. These characters have senses of humour, bad days and good ones.
Given the ending, it's likely we will see more of this world and I can hardly wait.
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5.0 out of 5 stars a delightful gem, April 1 2004
By Harriet Klausner - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Mistress of the Pearl (Hardcover)
Though they have pretty much conquered the planet Kundala after a century plus of resistance, the victorious aliens V'ornn remain in combat with the locals. The natives believe their Messiah, the "Dar Sala-at" will save them. Just the Kundalan belief that their legendary savior will help them overthrow the V'ornn invaders has lifted the spirits of the natives and helped them resist the intruders though how someone can join two spirits from opposite poles of the universe as the fabled champion will do seems hard to fathom especially by the V'ornn.

However, the impossible occurs when a Kundala female Riane contains her own soul and that of the dead Annon, ironically a V'ornn; the merger of two essences from opposite sides of the universe. The Kundalans believe that Riane is the Messiah who will vanquish the conquerors, but to do so they must obtain the mystical Pearl that only the true Dar Sala-at can yield its power.

Part humor, part military science fiction, and part fantasy, the third Pearl tale is a gem of a novel that uses amusing satirical slapstick moments to ease some of the major tension. The story line is action-packed and filled with adventure as series fans will delight in the rebellion but especially with the paradox of Riane-Annon. New readers will enjoy the tale as it is a stand alone, but even greater understanding especially with the V'ornn will occur by reading the delightful previous two epics (see RING OF THE FIVE DRAGONS and THE VEIL OF A THOUSAND TEARS).

Harriet Klausner

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