The Briar King
Vol. 1 of The Kingdoms of Thorn and Bone Greg Keyes
Del Rey, 552 pages
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Briar King, the opener to Greg Keyes’s new epic fantasy series The Kingdoms of Thorn and Bone, begins
on the pre-history of a world other than our own. The mysterious Skasloi
have been defeated by the human slaves they have kidnapped from various lands
and periods on our earth, in an uprising led by powerful mage Virginia Elizabeth
Dare (the alert reader will recognize here a neat alternate-world solution
for the puzzle of the lost English colony on Roanoke Island). But as Virginia
Dare stands victorious above the last Skasloi lord, he utters a warning:
Virginia and her champions don’t understand the darkness of the sedos
magic they have stolen to gain their power, and their use of it has doomed
them.
Skip forward a couple of millennia. The line of Virginia Dare has survived;
her direct descendent Muriele is wife to the King of Crotheny, one of the
largest and most powerful of the kingdoms human beings have built upon the
ruins of the Skaslois’ domain (and possibly domains even older). All is not
well. The threat of war with Hansa, another powerful kingdom, looms, and
dark intrigues are afoot at court. When a magically-enhanced assassination
attempt on Muriele is foiled only by the merest chance, the King--encouraged
by his devious brother Robert to believe (falsely) that the attack was masterminded
by Hansa--decrees that Muriele and their children must travel to the fortress
at Cal Azroth, where he thinks they will be safe. Only willful Princess Anne
is exempted from this order: because of her refusal to take the responsibilities
of her royal station seriously, her mother has decided to send her to the
Coven of St. Cer to be trained as an assassin.
Elsewhere in Crotheny, King’s holter Aspar White is beginning to sense that
something is not right in the great, primeval forest he’s charged to protect
and guard. The Sefry, a non-human race whose lives have always centered around
the forest, are fleeing it; they speak of the waking of the Briar King, a
figure out of myth and fairytale whose rising supposedly portends the end
of the age of humankind, and possibly the end of everything else as well.
Aspar knows the legends, and has never believed them; but when he discovers
strange and horrible human sacrifices deep in the woods, and encounters a
greffyn, a deadly beast he’d always believed as mythical as the Briar King
himself, he begins to re-think his doubt. Meanwhile, Stephen Darige, a scholarly
novice monk assigned to translate newly-discovered ancient texts, uncovers
tales of terrible magics and savage rituals--and realizes, to his horror,
that some of his fellow monks are engaged in just such rites. And far away
at St Cer, Princess Anne is visited by a vision of a masked woman who warns
her that there must be a born queen in Crotheny when he comes--though who
or what he is, the apparition will not say.
The Briar King features familiar story elements--court
intrigue, ancient prophecy, dark and secret magics, waking powers, the approach
of an apocalyptic evil--and an equally familiar array of character types--the
weakling king, the wronged queen, the devious counselor, the gruff woodsman,
the headstrong princess, the baseborn knight. But it’s by no means the formula
fantasy that such a description would suggest. Keyes brings these epic conventions
to vibrant life with well-motivated plot turns, dynamic action scenes, a
powerful underlying sense of dark mystery and menace, and characters that
aren’t cardboard archetypes, but fully-drawn individuals whose ambiguous
motivations and convincing inner lives lend depth to the plot-driven narrative.
The setting too is imagined with intelligence and skill, from the various
kingdoms and domains with their altered but identifiable European antecedents
(Keyes plays inventively with language, making up tongues for his different
nations that are just recognizable as corruptions of existing languages),
to the intricate historical background against which the action plays out,
revealed in tantalizing bits and pieces over the course of the book. The
significance of history--not only history correctly remembered, but also
history altered, corrupted or lost--is a recurring theme, and I suspect will
continue to be important to the series as it progresses. Less convincing
is the fact that Crotheny and the other kingdoms have existed for more than
two thousand years at a cultural and technological level apparently little
changed from that of the sixteenth century Roanoke settlers. I find it pretty
implausible, even in a world that includes magic, that these European-style
cultures wouldn’t have experienced an industrial revolution. This millennial
timespan is the only high fantasy convention in the book that doesn’t totally
work.
Especially well-drawn is the mythic and religious background, including a
powerful and somewhat ambiguous church, which appears to have taken all or
most magic into its keeping and to have codified a complicated religious
doctrine based on the dark sedos power utilized long ago
by Virginia Dare, and the even darker myths and legends the church has co-opted
or suppressed--particularly the tale of the Briar King, which may pre-date
even the Skasloi. Though no one really believes in the Briar King (except
perhaps for the Sefry), his presence twines a shadowy thread through the
memory of all human cultures, embodied in local harvest or spring festivals,
in ghost stories, in country legends, in traditional songs, in children’s
games. Throughout the book the characters encounter these legends and traditions,
each of which suggests something slightly different about the Briar King’s
nature and significance, building suspense as it slowly becomes apparent
that the Briar King is all too real.
Like most first series installments, The Briar King exists
principally to introduce characters and settings, to establish what’s at
stake, and to pose the questions the rest of the series will answer. Keyes
avoids a sense of stasis, however, by providing a complete story arc--the
book begins on the mystery of the Briar King and concludes with its solution,
thus tying up at least one major narrative thread--and by forcing change
upon his principal characters, all of whom, by book’s end, find themselves
not just in radically altered physical circumstances, but transformed inwardly
in some important way as well. Skillfully conceived, stirringly executed,
this is a book that will remind jaded readers of just why the traditional
high fantasy epic remains so enduringly popular. Reportedly there are to
be four volumes in all; the next, The Charnel Prince,
is due in 2004.
Copyright © 2003 Victoria Strauss
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