Three against the Witch World

by Andre Norton

Witch World: Publication Order (1965), Witch World: Estcarp Cycle (3), Hexenwelt (Book 3), Witch World (03)

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"Three against the Witch World. North, east, south, west... The offspring of Simon Tregarth, half earthling, half witch-brood, realized that they alone could perceive the four directions -- for everyone else, there was no East! It was a blank in the mind, a blank in legend an history. And when new mmenaces threatened, the Tregarths realized that in that mental barrier there lay the key to all their world... Somewhere to the unknown eastward must lie the sorcery that had secretly molded their show more destines!" --Back cover. show less

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8 reviews
Book 3 of the first Witch World series and different from the first two, which told the story of Simon Tregarth, who came to Witch World from our world through an interdimensional gateway, and Jaelithe, one of the Witches. The first books are concerned with how Simon and Jaelithe spearhead the fight against the Kolder, an alien race who came through yet another gateway, and so can be classified as science fantasy, given the amount of technology in the stories as well as the Witch World's psychic witch powers.

This book is told from the viewpoint of their oldest son, Kyllan, first of triplets. He and his brother Kemoc, and sister Kaththea, inherited the abilities of their parents who shared a mental bond, despite the rejection of the show more other Witches who deplore the idea that men can share the Power as it is called. The first part covers their upbringing, with Jaelithe ill for months following the birth, and after her recovery a remote parent, as is their father. The children are given to a nurse to raise, and, in the case of the boys, a soldier to train in warrior skills as, despite the removal of the Kolder, the land of Estcarp is still under severe pressure from their enemies to the north and south. Friends of their parents, Koris and Loyse, who featured in the first two novels, stand in loco parentis. As the chidren develop, so does their mental three-way bond, similar to that shared by their parents.

The first tragedy which will shape their destiny strikes when they are about 12 and Simon is lost at sea. Jaelithe departs to search for him. After a few more years, Koris and Loiyse are unavoidably absent and this provides the opportunity for the family's enemies to strike. I won't say more about the plot, other than to say their paths will separate but lead them ultimately to a strange land, which is old rather than new, and that what they discover throws an illuminating light on the history of Estcarp and the restrictions now based on the Power.

This story differs from the first two which were action adventure with quite a science fictional flavour. This is much more of a straight fantasy, except that intriguing and odd characters appear which add a different flavour to the series. The narrative is possibly a little flat; old time fantasy such as this doesn't feature deep characterisation, angst and self examination. Characters face problems and just get on with things rather than agonise. Yet I liked the different setting of this book and the characters they meet who are reminiscent of the Irish Sidhe or some otherworldly group.

It's also easy to see again how influential Norton was, with a sequence involving a dark force within a stone ring that pulls in its prey in a spiraling walk - reminiscent of the same idea in a Roger Zelazny Amber novel except this precedes the Zelazny book by some years. Norton had new ideas which no one had thought of before and other writers often borrowed them and gave them a different spin, which is why she had such an influence on the genre.

Therefore an enjoyable read even though the story is left at a point in the proceedings where more is obviously to come, probably in the next volume.
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Huh, funny. The things that make up most of Witch World in my mind - pools of evil in a wary land, strange creatures with varying levels of intelligence from animal to human or greater, and so on - are new to the characters in this book. The triplets go into Escore and find all these things for the first time. Subsequent stories are set either in Escore or in the Dales and the Waste, and nearly all have those elements... Ok story, though Kyllan is almost as dumb as a fairy tale hero about trying new stuff and ending up in serious trouble. And it ends with a beginning - not a cliffhanger, but a process completed so that something new can start. Neeext!
Hmmm, and that ending is very like the Solar Queen ones - quite firmly an ending, and show more equally firmly a setup for the next book. Things I hadn't noticed about Norton's style. show less
½
niente da fare... non va già.
Troppi nomi, luoghi da ricordare e abbinare, forse per il fatto che prima ci sono altri 2 libri...
Non mi piace lo stile di scrittura.
Lo rimetto in libreria. :(
Half earthling, half witch-brood -eek! Great cover art.
This is as awesome as the first time I read it in the 80s.
I need to re-read this before offering a proper review. Review pending.

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435+ Works 76,454 Members
Born Alice Mary Norton on February 17, 1912 in Cleveland, Ohio, she legally changed her name to Andre Alice Norton in 1934. She attended the Flora Stone Mather College of Western Reserve University (now Case Western Reserve) for a year then took evening courses in journalism and writing that were offered by Cleveland College, the adult division of show more the same university. Norton was a librarian for the Cleveland Library System then a reader at Gnome Press. After that position, she became a full-time writer. She is most noted for writing fantasy, in particular the Witch World series. Her first book The Prince of Commands was published in 1934. Other titles include Ralestone Luck, Magic in Ithkar, Voorloper, Uncharted Stars, The Gifts of Asti and All Cats are Gray. She also wrote under the pen names Andre Norton, Andrew North and Allen Weston She was the first woman to receive the Gandalf Grand Master of Fantasy and the Nebula Grand Master Award. She has also received a Phoenix Award for overall writing achievement, a Jules Verne Award, and a Science Fiction Book Club Book of the Year Award for her title The Elvenbane. In 1997 she was inducted into the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame. She died on March 17, 2005. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Borgman, Harry (Cover artist)
Pound,John (Cover artist)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Three against the Witch World
Original title
Three against the Witch World
Original publication date
1965
People/Characters
Kyllan Tregarth; Kemoc Tregarth; Kaththea Tregarth
Important places
Estcarp, Witch World; Escore, Witch World
First words
I am no song smith to forge a blade of chant to send men roaring into battle, as the bards of the Sulcar shops do when those sea-serpents nose into enemy ports.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)But this was the beginning of the tale, the sowing of the seed from which came later harvest - and it was the story of us three.
Original language*
Englisch
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Fantasy
DDC/MDS
813.5Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-1999
LCC
PS3527 .O632Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1900-1960

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816
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33,783
Reviews
7
Rating
½ (3.71)
Languages
7 — Czech, English, German, Italian, Lithuanian, Polish, Russian
Media
Paper
ISBNs
21
ASINs
15