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Blood and Iron: A Novel of the Promethean…
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Blood and Iron: A Novel of the Promethean Age (edition 2006)

by Elizabeth Bear

Series: The Promethean Age (1)

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8824224,311 (3.63)101
Fantasy. Fiction. HTML:

She is known as Seeker. Spellbound by the Faerie Queen, she has abducted human children for her mistress's pleasure for what seems like an eternity, unable to free herself from servitude and reclaim her own humanity.

Seeker's latest prey is a Merlin. Named after the legendary wizard of Camelot, Merlins are not simply those who wield magicâ??â??they are magic. Now, with the Prometheus Club's agents and rivals from Faerie both vying for the favor of this being of limitless magic to tip the balance of power, Seeker must persuade the Merlin to join her causeâ??or else risk losing something even more precious and more important to her than the fate of humankind… (more)

Member:Eltara
Title:Blood and Iron: A Novel of the Promethean Age
Authors:Elizabeth Bear
Info:Roc Trade (2006), Edition: First Printing Thus, Paperback, 448 pages
Collections:Your library
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Blood and Iron by Elizabeth Bear

  1. 21
    Fire and Hemlock by Diana Wynne Jones (bell7)
    bell7: While Blood and Iron draws on the legends of Tam Lin, Arthur, and others, Fire and Hemlock is solely a retelling of Tam Lin. Both are slightly strange retellings, but do so in entirely different manners.
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» See also 101 mentions

English (41)  French (1)  All languages (42)
Showing 1-5 of 41 (next | show all)
Clunky writing, silly plot, overwrought -- everything people don't like about fantasy and not smart enough (and definitely too unapolgetically Eurocentric) to be the sort of fantasy I like. Unfortunate; I was hoping that I'd like it enough to finish out the whole series but I don't think that's going to happen now. ( )
  leahsusan | Mar 26, 2022 |
Wanted to like this, but it seems to have been written for those who know the classic tales (Arthur, Tam Lin) better than I do. I was never quite able to follow everything that was going on. Left this one in the hotel room this morning for the next person to try.

And what a shame that this cover shows a white male mage at the New York library when it could have shown a black female Merlin! ( )
  VictoriaGaile | Oct 16, 2021 |
I think the first thing to understand when talking about an Elizabeth Bear book is that it will not be a quick, easy read. Bear's work is complex and layered, and she doesn't do hand holding - as a reader, you take the plunge and spend a good deal of time trying to keep your head above water until you get your bearings in her world. Additionally, she doesn't really do the sympathetic protagonist, so feeling connected to her characters is often a challenge.

Blood and Iron tackles a wide range of fantasy tropes - faerie, and Arthurian legend, and werewolves, and Celtic folklore, and dragons, and....it's a lot. There are so many interesting ideas explored, but I'm not sure any of them is given the focus they deserve. There is also a power imbalance in the relationship between Seeker, our main character, and Whiskey, the kelpie she binds, that feels....somehow problematically racial, particularly in today's specific climate.

All that said, Elizabeth Bear is an excellent writer, and I was engaged and excited to read throughout the novel. There were just too many times I felt lost to be able to give this a fully ringing endorsement. Reading Bear's work always makes me feel like I should just be a little bit smarter, and maybe it would work out better for me. I do think I will read the sequel, however, so that's something. ( )
1 vote NeedMoreShelves | Jun 29, 2020 |
Couldn't stay interested…didn't finish.
  JohnLavik | Mar 29, 2020 |
This was a tricky one. It was slippery in reading, rife with rich sense detail but with a terribly gentle touch on the unfurling of the plot, and perhaps, as a reader, I just need a firmer hand on the reins. Everything came together very satisfyingly - I found some genuine moments of heart-clenching in the resolutions - and I do very much like some of the concepts, but it never bundled me along with delight in the reading of it. Maybe part of that is that I have low engagement in general with traditional faerie, but I just never felt like she was binding her characters and their driving motivation together tightly enough to be reall compelling.

Still, interesting, and I'm curious about the rest of the series. ( )
  cupiscent | Aug 3, 2019 |
Showing 1-5 of 41 (next | show all)
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Elizabeth Bearprimary authorall editionscalculated
Youll, PaulCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Epigraph
But first ye'll let the black gae by,
And then ye'll let the brown;
Then I'll ride on a milk-white steed,
You'll pull me to the ground.
- "Tam Lin," Child Ballad version #39C
Dedication
This book is for the Bad Poets and for Jennifer Jackson, who between them made me keep writing it until I got it right.
First words
Mathew the Magician leaned against a wrought iron lamppost on Forty-second Street, idly picking at the edges of his ten iron rings and listening to his city breathe into the warm September night.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Fantasy. Fiction. HTML:

She is known as Seeker. Spellbound by the Faerie Queen, she has abducted human children for her mistress's pleasure for what seems like an eternity, unable to free herself from servitude and reclaim her own humanity.

Seeker's latest prey is a Merlin. Named after the legendary wizard of Camelot, Merlins are not simply those who wield magicâ??â??they are magic. Now, with the Prometheus Club's agents and rivals from Faerie both vying for the favor of this being of limitless magic to tip the balance of power, Seeker must persuade the Merlin to join her causeâ??or else risk losing something even more precious and more important to her than the fate of humankind

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