Gr 7 Up—Over a decade has passed since Nix's last Old Kingdom novel,
Abhorsen (HarperCollins, 2003), but he has lost none of his skill in depicting this fantasy realm. Nix sets
Clariel 600 years before his other Old Kingdom novels, in a time when the king is old and weary and the current Abhorsen prefers to hunt game rather than Free Magic creatures and necromancers. Clariel is a young woman who is close kin to both the King and the Abhorsen but with little knowledge of either. She has reluctantly come to the capital city of Belisaere with her mother, Jaciel, who has been declared a High Goldsmith. Clariel would prefer to roam free amongst the forest near her childhood home of Estwael and seeks any way to escape the odious city with its lifeless streets and political squabbles. Clariel's instructor in Charter Magic, Magister Kargrin, promises his help to leave the city in return for her aid in capturing a Free Magic creature that he believes is in league with Governor Kilp. Little does she realize the effect that the touch of the creature will have on her or the depths to which Kilp will stoop to assuage his ambition. Nix pens a compelling character in Clariel while his skill in rendering both politics and magic is strong. This excellent work can be enjoyed independently of the other Old Kingdom novels, but will certainly draw readers to those works.—
Eric Norton, McMillan Memorial Library, Wisconsin Rapids, WISix centuries before the events of Sabriel, Lirael, and Abhorsen, seventeen-year-old Clariel wants nothing more than to live in the Great Forest--until her parents are murdered. This prequel is a tonal departure; Clariel is both less likable and less noble-minded than Nix's other heroic protagonists. But series fans will treasure this long-awaited opportunity to return to a much-loved world, built with originality and richness.
Six centuries before the events of Sabriel (rev. 1/97), Lirael (rev. 7/01), and Abhorsen (rev. 3/03), circumstances in the Old Kingdom are vastly different: the addled king refuses to rule; the Abhorsen neglects his duty to fight the resurrected dead; and treacherous Governor Kilp presides over capitol city Belisaere. Seventeen-year-old Clariel (who is related to both the royal and Abhorsen families, and thus a distant ancestor of Sabriel and Lirael), feeling claustrophobic in the bustling capitol, wants nothing more than to live in the Great Forest--until Kilp murders her parents and abducts Clariel to establish her as a puppet queen. Clariel's grief and fury get the best of her, leading her into a devil's deal for revenge with manipulative cat-creature Mogget (a mainstay character of the other novels) and two sinister Free Magic beings. This prequel is a tonal departure; Clariel is both less likable and less noble-minded than her heroic kinswomen, and this is not a story of selflessly protecting the kingdom but rather of the protagonist's unwitting, gradual corruption. Series fans anticipating answers about Clariel's transformation from duped young woman into powerful necromancer Chlorr of the Mask (or about Mogget's own story) will not get them here: Nix writes in his author's note, "As to what [Clariel] did in the intervening years...who can say?" But those same fans will treasure this long-awaited opportunity to return to a much-loved world, built with as much originality and richness as ever. katie bircher
Be the first reader to comment.
Comment Policy:
Comment should not be empty !!!