The Hallowed Hunt by Lois McMaster Bujold
My rating: 4 of 5 stars Animal Spirits, Ghosts, Gods, History, and Romance The Hallowed Hunt (2005) begins with Lord Ingrey kin Wolfcliff (what a name!), high courier of the Royal Sealmaster, being sent to bring the corpse of Prince Boleso kin Stagthorne (!) from his hunting seat at (where else?) Boar's Head Castle back to the hallow king's hall at Easthome, along with the woman who killed him, Lady Ijada dy Castos (Holy Toledo!), so that he may be given funeral rites and she tried for murder. Ingrey soon discovers that the situation and his mission are complicated. Ijada brained the prince in self-defense with his handy war hammer when he was about to rape her (or worse) in a forbidden magic ritual, the spirit of a leopard the prince killed for the ritual has taken up residence inside Ijada, Ingrey's own wolf spirit similarly forced into him when he was a boy and suppressed for ten years is waking up, and something like a dark parasitic vine wrapped around Ingrey is telling him to kill Ijada. Will they make it to Easthome? Does Ingrey want to? Wouldn't he prefer the beautiful Lady Ijada to escape into the woods? He knows she'll likely be found guilty of murder, and he's attracted to her spirit, and he's also prone to hearing a voice say, "Kill her!" The story, Lois McMaster Bujold's third Chalion novel, occurs in the world of The Curse of Chalion (2001) and The Paladin of Souls (2003), but each of the books is stand alone, featuring different characters, settings, and stories. Here we are in the Weald, whose people practiced animal magic to infuse their warriors with the spirits of animals until 400 years ago, when the conquering Darthacans exterminated (nearly) all the spirit warriors, shamen, great beasts, and associated lore and imposed their own culture and Quintarian brand of the five-god religion (Mother, Father, Son, Daughter, Bastard) onto the Wealdings. Although 150 years ago the New Wealdings threw off Darthacan rule, they had mostly lost the "forest song" and "weirding" and spiritual animal affinity of the Old Wealdings--apart from their animal kin names. Currently most Wealdings, like Ingrey, see animal possession as defilement to burn away at the stake and reject the uncanny in favor of realpolitik to choose the next hallow king. The novel has Bujold's many strengths: convincing and compelling characters (like Ingrey and Ijada and supporting ones like Wencel, Hallana, and Jokol), coherent and textured fictional world, unpredictable plot that makes sense as things happen and revelations come, neat similes ("He paused, feeling like a man crossing river ice in winter and hearing a first faint cracking sound coming from under his feet"), thoughtful themes (about people and nature, religion and politics, time and the divine, identity and history, free will and destiny, and so on), wit ("Could youth and fury outrun middle age and terror?"), and wisdom ("Death is not a performance to rate ourselves upon, or to berate ourselves upon either"). This novel avoids violent action scenes. Though Ingrey is a deadly fighter, given to battle rages and unorthodox martial techniques, we never see him perform, but instead occasionally hear a minor character marvel at his past exploits, as when one guy says he saw Ingrey in a melee with bandits toss his sword up in the air, break a big man's neck, catch the sword when it fell and behead another guy. But in this novel Ingrey fights battles of the spirit rather than of the flesh. Perhaps Bujold's Chalion world, in which the five gods are very real, lends itself a bit too much to deus ex machina machinations (more than in her Vorkosigan universe), and she is capable of corny lines (cf the candlestick and scorching look one below), and sometimes her characters act stupidly (as when Ijada relates a vivid dream laden with portent and asks, "Do you think it might have been significant?"), and in both her Vorkosigan and her Chalion books she does fixate on aristocrats. . . But I have listened to or read many of Bujold's novels, and always find them like this one to be involving and entertaining comfort food for the mind and body. Marguerite Gavin's reading of the audiobook is good (apart from sometimes striving a bit too hard for dramatic effect by, for example, elongating some already long vowels). She speaks clearly and distinguishes subtly (maybe too subtly) among the characters, getting a little gruffer for men for instance. She's pleasant to listen to. I recommend The Hallowed Hunt to fans of imaginative, fantasy with magic (e.g., "its rumbling purr sawed through the air like some serrated song"), gods (e.g., "A warm, autumnal voice murmured, somewhere between his ear and his mind"), romance (e.g., "Ijada rose, snatched up her candlestick, gave Ingrey a look of scorching intensity, and fled up the stairs"), and bite (e.g., "I fear I feel about horses much as I feel about wives, these days. They last such a short time and I am weary of butchering them."). View all my reviews
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