Series: Book 3 in the Edda of Burdens series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: Fantasy, Fiction, Science Fiction
Summary
This direct sequel to Elizabeth Bear’s highly
acclaimed
All the Windwracked Stars picks up the story some
fifty years after Muire went into the sea and became the new
Bearer of Burdens.
Beautiful Cathoair, now an immortal warrior angel, has
been called back to the city of Eiledon to raise his
son--Muire’s son as well, cast up on shore as an
infant. It is seemingly a quiet life. But deadly danger
approaches...the evil goddess Heythe, who engineered the
death of Valdyrgard, has travelled forward in time on her
rainbow steed. She came expecting to gloat over a dead world,
the proof of her revenge, but instead she finds a Rekindled
land, renewed by Muire’s sacrifice.
She will have her revenge by forcing this new Bearer of
Burdens to violate her oaths and break her bounds and thus
bring about the true and final end of Valdyrgard. She will do
it by tormenting both Cathoair and his son Cathmar. But
Mingan, the gray wolf, sees his old enemy Heythe’s
return. He will not allow it to happen again. The third novel in Bear's Edda of Burdens series starts
about 50 years after the end of All the Windwracked Stars
(2008), when Muire, the last Valkyrie, went into the sea and
became the new Bearer of Burdens. Now her lover, Cathoair,
must raise their son, cast up on the shore as an infant. But
their ancient enemy, the goddess Heythe, is determined to
destroy all that Muire and Cathoair fought for. She will
start by tormenting Cathoair and his son, Cathmar, to force
Muire to break her vows and bring about the final
devastation. Bear's variation on this classic theme is
skillfully written, and the characters stand out, especially
the wolf Mingan. Enough background is provided so that having
read the first two isn't necessary to follow this one. The
pacing is a bit slow, however. The Sea Thy Mistress is
satisfying but not great fantasy adventure. --Frieda
Murray
Praise for
All the Windwracked Stars:
"Bear creates a world with an astonishing depth of
mythology in a tale that begins with Ragnarok...Bear’s
world building echoes the best of Zelazny and pulls the
reader into the story and the history until it’s over.
Muire is one of Bear’s more interesting and likable
characters, and the mythology Bear deploys promises further
satisfying stories based in it."--
Booklist (starred review)
"Bear's ability to create breathtaking variations on
ancient themes and make them new and brilliant is, perhaps,
unparalleled in the genre. Her lyrical style and heroically
flawed characters make this a priority purchase for most
libraries. Highly recommended."--
Library Journal (starred review)
Praise for
By the Mountain Bound:
“Numerous fantasy authors adopt the tropes of Norse
mythology, but Bear actively pursues them, channeling those
myths directly rather than overlaying them on more familiar
ones. The result demands much from readers, but repays it in
vivid, sensual imagery of a wholly different world.”--
Publishers Weekly
From Booklist
Review