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Graceling by Kristin Cashore: a decent new debut novel


Pages : [1] 2

Werthead
July 19th, 2008, 11:25 AM
Just reviewed this book. I was trying very hard to avoid the word 'nice', because it always feels like it's word to use when you want to damn a book with faint praise. But this is indeed a very 'nice' book which I enjoyed reading and a nice contrast to some of the heavier books I've been reading recently.

Graceling is the debut novel by American author Kristin Cashore. It is a stand-alone secondary world fantasy, although I'd hesitate to call it an epic fantasy. The writer is planning at least two more books set in the same world (the next one will be a prequel, called Fire), but Graceling is a single work mercifully lacking a cliffhanger ending. Interestingly, the American publishers are marketing it as a YA novel, although the British ones aren't.

Seven kingdoms sit uneasily alongside one another, constantly raiding and counter-raiding one another. A secretive organisation known as the Council is helping the common people of the lands survive in these harsh times. Meanwhile, certain people in the world are born with extraordinary abilities called Graces. Someone with the Grace of swimming can hold their breath for huge amounts of time underwater and swim like a fish, whilst someone with the Grace of swordsmanship is a brilliantly talented warrior, able to predict an enemy's moves with stunning speed.

Katsa, neice to King Randa of the Middluns, has the Grace of killing. She is the King's assassin, his enforcer and, when necessary, his torturer. She hates the role and yearns for a less violent existence. When her role in the Council leads her into a conspiracy over the kidnapping of the King of Lienid's father, she is forced into an uneasy alliance with Po, the Prince of Lienid, a Graced warrior of exemplery skill. The path they follow leads to startling discoveries over their own abilities, and their confrontation with someone whose Grace makes them almost unstoppable.

For a debut novel, Graceling is well-written, nicely-structured and easy to read. The characters are well-drawn and the storyline intriguing enough to draw the reader along at a good speed. The notion of Graces, although not hugely original, is nonetheless explored in-depth throughout the book with some nice, logical extrapolations of the abilities on show.

However, there are some issues. The names of the characters and kingdoms are all somewhat whimsical and occasionally distract from the seriousness of the tale. This wasn't a huge problem for me, but given that I know that some people pointblank refused to read The Red Wolf Conspiracy because of it, I know it will put some people off. Also, the ending feels a little bit too neat. True, the author throws a wrench into the final couple of chapters that was genuinely unexpected and means the ending is hardly all happiness and light, but still, all the storylines are tied off nicely. The only big unanswered question, the background and motivations of the main villain, will be explored in the next book.

Balanced against these issues is a well-drawn tale featuring interesting protganosits in a decently-realised setting. Whilst Graceling won't be generating Rothfuss or Lynch levels of excitement for a debut novel, it's certainly enjoyable and well worth a read.

Graceling ( ***-and-a-half ) will first be released by Gollancz in the UK as an export edition on 20 November 2008, followed by standard tradeback and hardcover releases on 22 January 2009 (by coincidence, my 30th birthday). The US edition will be published by Harcourt Books on 1 October 2008.

Rob B
September 22nd, 2008, 03:53 PM
Hobbit just reviewed (http://www.sffworld.com/brevoff/481.html) this last week.
Kristin Cashore’s debut novel reads very much like that: a good page turner, a pleasingly entertaining and well written High Fantasy. It is nicely paced, fairly well developed and engagingly romantic. Unfortunately, the writer’s obvious talent and skill are let down by lapses in judgement, as it also has some of the most annoying, if not inopportune, names created for a Fantasy novel I have recently come across. (And there are a lot of bad ones out there.)

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KatG
September 22nd, 2008, 06:22 PM
Seriously, we're going to punk her on the names? This is what it's come down to, has it? We're going to have politically correct name codes now? They don't seem any worse to me than anyone else's.

Her being thrust into YA in the States highlights a problem that has developed in the U.S. market. Having an assassin for the main character in a YA is, um, interesting.

How does the author deal with a main character who is innately able to kill and forced to do it, as well as being of royal birth? What sort of person is Katsa?

Werthead
September 22nd, 2008, 07:23 PM
Well:

Kiska leaves the King's service about ten minutes into the book, and from her flashbacks there's an indication that most of the people she tortured and killed were 'bad', although there's a few good people she definitely feels remorse over. However, none of these happen in much detail in the present-day storyline. Kiska spends most of the time feeling angry about being a killer simply because that's what her abilities are, but there is a cool twist later in the book when it is revealed her grace has been mis-identified.

Mithfânion
September 23rd, 2008, 01:52 AM
Seriously, we're going to punk her on the names? This is what it's come down to, has it? We're going to have politically correct name codes now? They don't seem any worse to me than anyone else's.

The names are very simplistic and unappealing. There is nothing wrong with reviewers pointing that out. Since in Fantasy I often find that the quality and originality of the names used is indicative of quality of the books.

Werthead
September 23rd, 2008, 09:40 AM
The names are very simplistic and unappealing. There is nothing wrong with reviewers pointing that out. Since in Fantasy I often find that the quality and originality of the names used is indicative of quality of the books.

Really? Sapkowski has some pretty stupid names and he's really good. Bakker's names may be internally logically consistent, but they are a bit clunky and they don't detract from his books at all. I also didn't find the Redick sufferered much from having some bad names, although lots of other people did.

We could go into Erikson as well, but since I know you're not a fan that's probably not a good example.

KatG
September 23rd, 2008, 11:40 AM
The names are very simplistic and unappealing. There is nothing wrong with reviewers pointing that out. Since in Fantasy I often find that the quality and originality of the names used is indicative of quality of the books.

I'm sure that those who regard "whimsical" names as a literary evil are deeply relieved to have been alerted. (Not that these names truly are; see Susannah Clarke for proper whimsey.) Whereas those who are sick and tired of the complicated D&D names in fantasy were no doubt delighted.

Those of us who, however, prefer to assess novels on something other than the author's name selection, are seeking story information. Thank you for your elaboration Wert, but I was also interested in her personality, such as you assessed it. Also, what was the Prince like?

Mithfânion
September 23rd, 2008, 12:11 PM
Katsa? King Randa? Po the Prince?

How much lamer and simplistic can your names get? This sounds totally run-of-the-mill.

I don't see what this has to do with whimsical or a like or dislike of other books; on it's own it sounds very silly. And oftentimes that is an indicator of quality in my experience.

Intelligent and unbiased readers who have the ability to read and pick up nuances will know that this is not the same as proclaiming a book a mishit in advance, it's just that the signs are poor and it doesn't invite me to read it.

Also, what was the Prince like?

Prince Po, right? Or his younger brother, Prince Pipi?

KatG
September 23rd, 2008, 12:30 PM
I see, so if he was called Grisheand'real the Prince, that's better? Or John Stormbreaker and his sword Blackknife? Judah Low? Which conformist, formulaic, acceptably gravitas fantasy name should he have?

Whimsical came from the reviews, not from me. And it was raised as a main complaint about the book, not simply a poor sign, which it isn't in any case for most people. Indeed, it wasn't for Wert, but he raised it because he knew others may gripe. You may get your indicators from such things, but I don't, and so I am after other information about the story. I like the concept of someone who has had to kill from what seems her own nature and is then fighting against it. I'd like to know more about how that worked.

So, the Prince, with the super sword skills, (and I don't care if his name is Po Broodypants, though with the Asian aspect to his first name, perhaps that is unlikely,) what's he like?

And Wert, is tying up all the ends a preference tick you have, or did you feel that it really didn't work well for this particular story?

Mithfânion
September 23rd, 2008, 12:52 PM
Which conformist, formulaic, acceptably gravitas fantasy name should he have?

Something that sounds like someone actually put some thought into it. Something that doesn't scream Young Adult. Or adult but self published. Something that indicates here is a world worth visiting and that I'd like to see more of. Something that sounds like Fantasy rather than something you'd think up in grammar school.

Look, if names have no meaning for you then names like this are fine. If you expect a bit more, like I do, then it's not particularly alluring.

 

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