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The Wandering Fire by Guy Gavriel Kay
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Wandering Fire, The (The Fionavar Tapestry, Book 2) (original 1986; edition 2001)

by Guy Gavriel Kay

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2,152352,760 (4.03)1 / 80
Member:nihawkins
Title:Wandering Fire, The (The Fionavar Tapestry, Book 2)
Authors:Guy Gavriel Kay
Info:Roc Trade (2001), Paperback, 400 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:****
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The Wandering Fire by Guy Gavriel Kay (1986)

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English (33)  Dutch (2)  All languages (35)
Showing 1-5 of 33 (next | show all)
The end of this one almost pushes it up to a four--and maybe upon further reflection it will--because it is a truly spectacular last forty pages or so, but this is the one book in the series that I always found just a little too disjointed.
  rrainer | Apr 30, 2013 |
The second book of the Fionavar Tapestry feels by far the shortest, to me. That isn't to say not much happens -- a lot does happen, so much that it makes my head spin a little, but it feels quite short. Possibly because my copy is both slim and has bigger writing than the other books, which are both thicker and have tiny writing. Anyway!

The Wandering Fire really introduces the Arthurian thread, which is the newest thing. It's been hinted at and set up already in The Summer Tree, but it's in The Wandering Fire that that's finally articulated. I'm interested as to how much Guy Gavriel Kay has drawn on existing Arthurian legend and how much he has built himself. I haven't read anything about Arthur being punished over and over again -- he's generally portrayed as fairly virtuous -- and I've never read anything about Lancelot raising the dead. I do like the way the legend is constructed here -- differences to the usual main themes and stories, but using them and showing that the stories we have are supposed to be reflections and echoes of this 'reality'.

I love the fact that the gods aren't supposed to act and there are penalties for this... and actually more of the lore about the gods in this world, like Dana working in threes and her gifts being two-edged swords.

The death in this book makes me cry... not the actual death, at least not until the very last line of that section, but the reactions, and particularly Paul's. This isn't really surprising, but it highlights once again how much these books make me care.

Reread again in February 2010. It's amazing to me how much I can love almost every word of this book and yet find a small scene was horribly jarring -- it's the same in The Summer Tree, just one scene sticks in my throat and won't go down. It's the scene with Kim and Loren, at Maidaladan. It just doesn't make sense. There's no build to it. I always thought she should go to Aileron instead... now there's a build-up that makes at least some sense.

Nonetheless, wow. This book breaks me more every time. ( )
  shanaqui | Apr 9, 2013 |
By this point in reading the trilogy, you've probably decided whether you can bear with Guy Gavriel Kay's style or not -- whether you can be invested in his characters or not. If the answer is yes, then carry on: he won't disappoint you. If not, then... I don't think he will get your attention at all.

Less seems to happen in this book until the end: it's a time of waiting, of things coming together. If you're invested in the characters, though, there's plenty to worry about: Kim's dilemmas, whether she has a right to do what she's doing; Paul's separation from humanity; and Kevin's initial helplessness, and then his journey to the Goddess... And there's Arthur, of course, and the Wild Hunt, and Darien...

Yep, and if you were wondering, I really do mean Arthur. King Arthur. I love what Kay does with his story, with the image of his tapestry -- but I can't say more because I'd plagiarise my essay, again. My academic life needs to stop getting in the way of my fannish meta, ugh. Suffice it to say that Guy Gavriel Kay nods to the Arthurian tradition whilst creating something entirely his own.

Not the strongest of the three books, but still beautiful. ( )
  shanaqui | Apr 9, 2013 |
Yeah, y'know, pretty readable (I finished it and picked up the third book right away) but very clearly Tolkienesque in an inferior way as far as things like depth of world-building go. Not bad but not much more. And yeah, again, I have to call out the Arthur bit - why bring in that tired ol' piece of fantasy unless you do something quite different with it (as [a:Gwyneth Jones|7272|Gwyneth Jones|http://www.goodreads.com/images/nophoto/nophoto-U-50x66.jpg] did in [b:Bold As Love|1118463|Bold as Love (Gollancz)|Gwyneth Jones|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1181144715s/1118463.jpg|1105495])? ( )
  comixminx | Apr 5, 2013 |
3.5 stars.

Written review coming soon . . . ( )
  mossjon | Mar 31, 2013 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Guy Gavriel Kayprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Springett, MartinCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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The Wandering Fire is dedicated to my wife, LAURA, who came with me to find it.
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Winter was coming.
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"Vous voulez votre propre malheur" murmura Paul.
Arthur se tourna vers lui, avec un sourire plein de compassion : "C'était voulu depuis longtemps."
Et le visage d'Arthur Pendragon était empreint en cet instant d'une noblesse plus pure que ce que Paul avait jamais pu voir de toute sa vie. Plus encore qu'en Liranan ou en Cernan des Animaux. C'était la quintessence de la noblesse, et tout en Paul protestait contre le fatal destin qui découlerait de ce choix effroyable.
Diarmuid s'était détourné.
"Lancelot !" dit Arthur à la silhouette étendue sur la pierre.
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0451458265, Paperback)

The Wandering Fire is the second novel of Guy Gavriel Kay’s critically acclaimed fantasy trilogy, The Fionavar Tapestry. A mage’s power has brought five university students from our world into a realm where an ancient evil has freed itself from captivity to wreak revenge on its enemies…

The ice of eternal winter has reached out to enshroud Fionavar, the first of all worlds. For the Unraveller has broken free after millennia enchained—and now his terrible vengeance has begun to take its toll on mortals and immortals, mages and warriors, dwarves and the lios alfar, the Children of Light.

Only five men and women of our own world, brought by magic across the Tapestry of worlds to the very heart of the Weaver’s pattern, can hope to wake the allies they so desperately need. Yet none can foretell whether even these beings out of legend have the power to shatter the Unraveller’s icy grip of death upon the land…

(retrieved from Amazon Sat, 05 Jan 2013 21:10:05 -0500)

(see all 3 descriptions)

This story finds the evil Rakoth Maugrim threatening the very existence of Fionavar. To stop him, Kimberly Ford and her four companions from our world must summon the Warrior Condemned from his resting place.

(summary from another edition)

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