Initiate’s Trial
First book of Sword of the Canon
-
-
5.0 • 3 Ratings
-
-
- $9.99
-
- $9.99
Publisher Description
The long-awaited beginning of the fourth story arc – Sword of the Canon – in the epic fantasy series, the Wars of Light and Shadow.
Betrayed and double-crossed, Arithon s’Ffalenn is held captive by the Order of the Koriathain. The desperate Fellowship Sorcerers have gambled the weal of Athera and forced through the perilous bargain that spared him, as the last Prince of Rathain, and their sole hope of unity. To suspend the Prime Matriarch’s decree of execution, Arithon lives only to battle Marak’s horde of free wraiths, unleashed one by one from the shielding grip of the star wards.
But on the day the last wraith is redeemed, the inflexible terms sealed by Dakar’s oath of debt will be forfeit…
Against a backdrop in which the Religion of Light has undergone schism, the fanatical True Sect’s high priesthood stands consumed by its thwarted ambition: to conquer Havish, the backbone of order that secures the terms of Paravian survival. Now Lord Mayor of Etarra, Lysaer s’Ilessid must fight the pull of the Mistwraith’s curse, and battle for sanity to uphold his just ethic. Another young defender will stand at his side, newly sworn by the Sorcerer’s auspices.
As Arithon’s life once again becomes the fulcrum that shifts the game board, Elaira’s choice might save or break the unstable future; while at large and answerable to no mortal law, Davien and the dragon that holds his service throw in the wild card no one predicts…
Reviews
‘Astonishingly original and compelling… A gifted creator of wonder’
RAYMOND E. FEIST
‘Janny Wurts builds beautiful castles in the air … where every detail is richly imagined and vividly rendered’
DIANA GABALDON
‘It ought to be illegal for one person to have so much talent’
STEPHEN DONALDSON
About the author
Janny Wurts is the author of the Cycle of Fire series, co-author of the worldwide bestselling Empire series with Raymond E. Feist, and is currently working on the Wars of Light and Shadow series. She often paints her own covers and is also an expert horsewoman, sailor, musician and archer.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Magical factions scheme in the shadow of impending religious war in the hefty ninth installment of Wurts's Wars of Light and Shadow. After 249 years of imprisonment by the Koriathain, the captive prince Arithon is freed but left amnesiac and alone. Pledged to noninterference, the Fellowship field sorcerer Asandir cannot intervene directly as the Koriani Prime Matriarch's search for the lost prince stirs to action both the fanatical True Sect and Arithon's accursed half-brother, Lysaer, whose precarious self-control is challenged by Arithon's reawakening powers of shadow. Though this installment is burdened by overornate language ("Sweated by the fact she laid bare his worst fear, Lysaer slashed back with as brutal an honesty") and challenging to the new reader, Wurts (Stormed Fortress) neatly balances both the epic scale of the coming clash and the individual perspective of those swept into it while weaving an impressive tapestry of politics, religion, and magic.
Customer Reviews
Fabulous escape
When I get a chance to read I like to use it to escape to some other time and place. The way this book is written, the reader has no choice but to be swept away by the immensity of both the characters and their world.
A big part of the reason I read fantasy fiction is that I enjoy mulling over the plausibility of a created world, remarking to myself how this or that would not work but admiring the effort to keep it together.
The world created by these words is impeccable.I got to soar in its plausibility, and read without fear of the reality jolt I feel when something does not fit. Simply put it took me away to a place far different from here that was complex, beautiful,terrifying,and full of believable wonders.
The treatment of the hero villain relationship seemed to me to be a fresh one. The reader is treated with respect by not being force fed what the author holds as the value of right and wrong, but given full rein to decide if there even is such a thing or if it's all a matter of perception.
Never condescending in content, and challenging in diction, a total pleasure to read in all the ways I enjoy a book. I have read every book in each of the series, and find them of consistent quality. What is remarkable about that is that one of those qualities is a freshness of outlook. Not unpredictable for the sake of it, just thought provoking perspectives weaving in and out of one another.
"What if?"is a question I enjoy. It is asked many times and presented many different ways, I felt captivated by its allure from cover to cover.
Seldom have I read a book twice, these books may change that severely.