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Title: Oathblood (Vows and Honor, Book 3) by Mercedes Lackey ISBN: 0-88677-773-9 Publisher: DAW Books Pub. Date: April, 1998 Format: Mass Market Paperback Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $6.99 |
Average Customer Rating: 4.41 (29 reviews)
Rating: 4
Summary: "Oathblood" delivers what it promises
Comment: When I picked up this book, I knew what it promised -- on the back cover it says that there is a new "short novel" and the collection of all of the Tarma and Kethry stories in one place. I was thrilled. I have been trying to read all of the Sword and Sorceress volumes, but I'm never sure if I've read them all, since most of them are out of print. I knew, as anyone who is familiar with this form of literature should be, that the "short novel" advertised would be a novella, or a long short story. Fine with me! I love short stories, and I frankly have preferred Tarma and Kethry in short story form to novel form. Even their novels read as a string of adventures, most of the time. And for those reviewers who said that some of the chapters were directly out of one of the previous novels? Well, I direct you to Sword and Sorceress, where they were originally published. This is a nice collection of short stories for those of us who are interested in the characters of Tarma and Kethry and would like to get all of their stories in one place.
Rating: 2
Summary: Getting very irritated..
Comment: due to the fact that the only thing Mercedes Lackey has written lately that is any good is stuff that she HAS already written, and has been repackaged as "new" books. Certainly this particular issue has one or two stories that were not in the original "vows and honor" duet, however for those of us who are religious readers of the Sword and Sorceress volumes, they are STILL old news. Pleasant to visit old friends yes, and to be certain Tarma and Kethry are some of her most well written and enjoyable characters- I definitely recommend the book to those who have not read Oathbound/Oathbreakers or the Sword and Sorceress short stories.
However, I am seriously disgusted. When I picked up this book, I was very excited- "WOW! A new Tarma and Kethry book!"
I flipped through the pages, feeling my enthusiasm drain out like old water from the fish tank.
She had done it to me again- packaging a "series" of books in one binding, with nothing on the cover or back description to inform a reader that this was, in fact, nothing new.
I had gotten suckered in with two of her earlier books being packaged together, paid my $7.50 for it (obscene isn't it?) and got home all ready to read. And bam.. fish water again. I already OWNED the two books this new(ly packaged and reformed old writing) contained.
So this "new" Tarma and Kethry book (for which, I was to be charged MORE than the ORIGINAL two together cost me) raised my ire. It will be a LONG time before I can be roused to even investigate any "new" books by Lackey. If ever.
Rating: 4
Summary: Actually, four and a half stars
Comment: "Oathblood" is a very good short story collection.
Some previous reviewers have been rather upset that two of the short stories were put into the original "Oathbound" book. I'm not; I figured that Ms. Lackey needed to put all her short stories in one place, as they were originally published, for two reasons.
One, it helps fans get all the stories in one place.
Two, it helps to understand Tarma and Kethry chronologically if you're buying one of Ms. Lackey's books for the first time. Not everyone who picked this book up had read anything about Tarma or Kethry before; Ms. Lackey basically had to do this.
Although I have nothing wrong with the "commercial" instinct some folks seem to be decrying, I really don't think that's what this was about. (More than any other writer wanting to make a living, that is. And really, what's wrong with that?)
Tarma is a super warrior with a twist; she's a Swordsworn votary of the Shin'a'in goddess, and as such, is "as neutral (sexually) as the blade she bears." (Hope that isn't too bad a paraphrase.) She likes men personally, but has no interest or desire in them, and likes it that way due to a personal tragedy in her past. (Plus, the Shin'a'in goddess takes people as her votaries for various reasons; they're all turned effectively neuter -- the Swordsworn, that is, not others -- so it's just as well Tarma had no real intention to marry after all that anyway. She can't miss what she doesn't want.)
Kethry, on the other hand, is very beautiful, intelligent, spirited, and a strong magic user. As Tarma's partner, originally you'd think they'd never get on. But they do, and quite famously in every respect.
These stories show how their relationship started, how it developed, and the last two stories show Kethry's family (sworn to help Tarma rebuild her lost clan of Tale'sedrin) and how they interact.
I really enjoyed the last two stories. The one about Forst Reach and it's horses (and horsetalking) was very, very funny, and it featured the welcome return of Beaker and Jodi (now paired off) from "Oathbreakers." The very last story featured Jadrie, Kethry's firstborn daughter, and how she helped her mama and Tarma save her two best female friends.
Very uplifting story; very powerful in its own quiet way, and some of the best recent writing Ms. Lackey's done in the Valdemar and related seria since 1996. ("Exile's Honor" is also excellent. I'm really looking forward to "Exile's Valor.")
I'd give this book five stars except for two things: one, the other reviewer is correct that some of these stories were already available in "The Oathbound."
But it's the second that really gets to me, and it's not Ms. Lackey's fault. The second is this; why is the cover so odd? Kethry doesn't look old enough (even if magic does delay the onset of full maturity, she should look older than _this_, and actually, she looks quite the little ... on the cover, doesn't she?), and Tarma looks too beautiful for her characterization. And, more importantly, Tarma looks completely different than she did on the previous two books, "The Oathbound" and "Oathbreakers." (At least Kethry's face is the same. Tarma's isn't.)
What was up with _that_?
Oh, and who's brilliant idea was it to show Warrl not as a wolf-like creature, but as a Siberian husky?
That's the main reason this book doesn't get five stars, and like I said, it had nothing to do with Ms. Lackey. But, as it's a part of the book DAW put out, and I have no other way to complain about it, I'm doing so this way.
Anyway, if you come to this book cold (without reading any previous Tarma and Kethry books), you should be able to understand it. But if you've read the other Tarma and Kethry books, you'll enjoy it more, no question.
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Title: By the Sword by Mercedes Lackey ISBN: 0886774632 Publisher: DAW Books Pub. Date: February, 1991 List Price(USD): $7.99 |
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Title: Storm Breaking (The Mage Storms, Book 3) by Mercedes Lackey ISBN: 0886777550 Publisher: DAW Books Pub. Date: October, 1997 List Price(USD): $7.99 |
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Title: Storm Rising by Mercedes Lackey ISBN: 0886777127 Publisher: DAW Books Pub. Date: October, 1996 List Price(USD): $6.99 |
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Title: Winds of Fury (The Mage Winds, Book 3) by Mercedes Lackey ISBN: 0886776120 Publisher: DAW Books Pub. Date: August, 1994 List Price(USD): $6.99 |
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Title: Winds of Change (The Mage Winds, Book 2) by Mercedes Lackey ISBN: 0886775639 Publisher: DAW Books Pub. Date: August, 1994 List Price(USD): $7.99 |
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