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Loading... Atlan (1965)by Jane Gaskell
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Take Edgar Rice Burrough's Tarzan, H. Rider Haggard's Lost Civilizations and John Norman's Gor and as your heroine princess raised to believe she's divine and men are extinct and you have the world of the Atlan Saga. Atlan, the second in the trilogy (or third, given Serpent is sometimes split into two works), continues the perils of Princess Cija, who falls into the clutches of Sedili, the first wife of her lover Zerd, a man-serpent general. Cija does grow on you, which given these are supposed to be her diaries is important, and this is my favorite of the books narrated by her. (Her much smarter daughter Seka takes over in Some Summer Lands.) Sometimes I'm embarrassed to admit I've read these, let alone these are favorites that have been on my bookshelves since my teens, but there you are. Addictive like crack. Or just crack pot. no reviews | add a review
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.9Literature English English fiction Modern PeriodLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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In this book, Cija becomes a mother, and sheds many of her youthful principles in efforts to survive. Perhaps two-thirds of the chapters might have been titled "Out of the Frying Pan, Into the Fire," as the imperial status that she attained at the end of the first book makes her a target for abuse and exploitation as often as it protects her. She frequently finds cause for reproaching herself, and her various associates, companions, and lovers all have a touch of ambivalence, but tend more to the bad than the good.
As the military and political situation in the Atlan capital heats up, Cija is sent into the continent's interior to be sequestered at a half-ruined castle. The second half of the book, set within and around this castle, has a very gothic tone to it. The phenomenon of "Old Atlan," which embraces humans, animals, plants, and even architecture in some unexplained genius loci becomes more active and important in this installment. The end of the book clearly concludes an episode of Cija's saga, but has much less sense of resolution than the previous one, which delivered her to the throne of Atlan. I don't have a copy of the next volume (The City), but I guess I'll keep an eye out for it, without too much urgency.