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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Second in Abramham's Long Price Quartet, A Betrayal in Winter is long on character and setting and short on action. And that's an excellent mix in this novel. This sequel to A Shadow in Summer weaves together another plot by the Galts against the lands of the Khaiem with a continuation of Otah's story as he gets caught up in the dynastic struggle for his father's throne. I enjoyed this book even more than the first. Abraham has managed to give us a complete story in this volume while still keeping the larger story of the Quartet moving forward. The characters are sharper and more complex than in the first book. The plot, though a bit slow in starting, has a better pace once it gets going and the book becomes a page turner right to the end. I'm looking forward to An Autumn War. From Publishers Weekly Set 15 years after the events of 2006's A Shadow in Summer, Abraham's clever second novel follows the tribulations of Otah Machi, the sixth son of the Khai Machi. On the demise of the Khai, one son must dispose of all other contenders in order to become the new ruler. Exiled years ago for refusing to become a magic-wielding poet, Otah made his home far from Machi, changed his name to Itani, worked as a laborer and never interfered in affairs of state, hoping to escape the kill-or-be-killed tradition. Now the old Khai's death approaches, and Otah's oldest brother, Biitrah, has been smothered in his sleep. Whispered rumor—which may have been started by the Galts, an empire desperate to destroy the house of Machi—puts the blame for the murder on Otah. He returns to Machi, grimly acknowledging that he must kill his brothers to save himself. Mystery, love triangles and struggles with magical creatures called andat make for a slow-starting but well-rounded story. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:15 -0400)
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As for the novel itself: everything is paced leisurely, the only "action" taking the form of Machiavellian court politics and personal moral struggles by the characters trying to exist in a stifling world of form and ritual. There is a romance, which is doomed from it's beginning. It wasn't the type of novel to keep (me anyway) up at night, turning the pages.
Although this is the second in a series of four, _Betrayal in Winter_ stands well on its own. Abraham's writing is lovely and his fantasy world rich in description and detail. 4/5 (