Last First Snow
Craft Sequence, Book 4
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
Starred review from April 13, 2015
Gladstone adds to his outstanding Craft sequence with a tense legal thriller (the first volume chronologically, but the fourth one published) centered on the Skittersill Rising, an event that sets the scene for
the events of 2013’s Two Serpents Rise. Twenty years after
the defeat of the gods of the land called Dresediel Lex, Craftswoman and lawyer Elayne Kevarian attempts to broker a land management deal for the Dresediel Lex neighborhood of Skittersill. Interested parties include the King in Red, a conqueror of gods; landholder Tan Batac; and priest Temoc Almotil. An encampment of protesters, defiant in the face of impending gentrification, complicates matters. As the specter of civil unrest looms, Elayne navigates old enmities, conspiracy, and rampant greed. Meanwhile, Temoc is torn between his responsibilities to the protestors who
look to him for leadership, and his love and devotion to his wife and young son. Gladstone’s gift for vivid storytelling, his deep empathy for his characters, his sly satire of current socioeconomic issues, and the rich, diverse world of his novels have become reliable pleasures, always enthralling and somehow consistently improving with every book.
June 15, 2015
The God wars are over, and now Craftsmen rule over the city-state of Dresediel Lex. Lawyer Elayne Kevarian is brought in on a contract dispute between the Red King, ruler of the city, and Tan Batac, a businessman seeking permission to redevelop the slum called Skittersill. Elayne believes she has a fair deal worked out, but a judge orders her back to the Skittersill to include the residents in the negotiations. The Skittersill might be a slum, but it houses thousands of people who want to fight for their homes. They choose as their negotiator Temoc Almotil, a priest of the old gods. VERDICT This latest series entry (after Full Fathom Five) serves as a prequel and takes place before Three Parts Dead. A bizarrely triumphant blending of lawyers with gods, magic, and faith, Gladstone's book transfixes modern socioeconomic issues such as gentrification but never neglects the magic in his worlds.[See Prepub Alert, 2/2/15.]--MM
Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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