Dragaera

Dzur review

Tue Jun 20 04:40:28 PDT 2006

I've reviewed an ARC of _Dzur_ here:

http://www.steelypips.org/weblog/2006/06/brust_dzur.php

It's fairly short, so I'll also paste in the text here:

* * * *

Fans of Steven Brust's Vlad Taltos series: do not read any review of
_Dzur_ (out in August) other than this one. There are two surprises in
the Prologue, one small and one big, and while it's hard to call them
*spoilers* since they're in the Prologue, it's so much fun to
experience them as surprises. (The jacket copy is safe.)

Fortunately, the basic plot can be sketched without revealing these
surprises. After the series-changing events of _Issola_, Vlad has gone
for a meal at Valabar's in Adrilankha. There, he finds that his
estranged wife Cawti is having problems: they were both in the
Organization (think Mafia); he'd left her the Organization's interests
in South Adrilankha when he left town several books back; and now the
Left Hand of the Jhereg, a sorcerous organization, is moving in. (As
the Organization is also known as the Right Hand, this allows the
utterly deadpan statement, "It's unfortunate, how little the Right
Hand knows what the Left Hand is doing.") For various reasons, Vlad
agrees to help Cawti, despite the personal danger to himself (he
didn't leave town for a vacation, several books back).

Actually, if you need that backstory, you shouldn't be reading this
book. Start with _Jhereg_ and go forward in publication order.

If you don't need that backstory, just go buy the book when it comes
out in August. It has all the stuff you read a Vlad novel for: old
friends; enjoyable new characters; loving descriptions of food (the
meal at Valabar's is spread out over the remaining chapters as the
opening section); snark; and using one's wits to get out of desparate
situations. And it's really good to see how Vlad is growing and
changing; this book is a very interesting contrast to _Dragon_, the
book before _Issola_ and also named after a very war-inclined House.
(It's killing me that I can't say more about it than that. But,
interesting contrast; watch for it.)

At this point in the series, there are a number of long-term plot
issues waiting to be resolved. I suspect that some people will want
more movement on these than they're going to get; but I think enough
happens in this book to be a book, and I'm willing to trust Brust on
the pacing of the series overall. And I very much enjoyed and
appreciated what happens here--all I really want is for August to
hurry up and get here so I can discuss it!

Many thanks to Patrick Nielsen Hayden for the Advance Uncorrected Proof.

* * * *

I really do look forward to the list's reactions. I know, I know, so
do you all . . .

-- 
Kate Nepveu
kate.nepveu at gmail.com