The Bone Queen

by Alison Croggon

Books of Pellinor (Short Stories and Novellas — 0.5 prequel)

On This Page

Description

Cadvan of Lirigon, one of the most brilliant Bards of his generation, has been exiled for a terrible crime that unleashed the power of the Bone Queen and wrought destruction across Annar. Meanwhile, in Lirigon, several unnerving events suggest that the Dark is growing in strength again, and that the Bone Queen may yet lurk in the world. Cadvan must once again face the evil that almost destroyed him.

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

2 reviews
After a gap of eight years Alison Croggan has fulfilled her promise to her fans that she would further enrich the narratives of her epic fantasy series known as Pellinor. Her world of Edil-Amarandh -- in which Pellinor is merely one city -- is set in a dim and distant past where not only magic is a reality but also perilous realms exist beyond the everyday world of humans, realms where entities like the Bone Queen can survive. If we want to imagine Edil-Amarandh we can do worse than picture it as a pre-echo of Atlantis, a continent positioned somewhere between the Old World and the New with mountainous spines somewhat reminiscent of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. All of the action of The Bone Queen takes place in the north, in the lee of the show more Osidh Elador mountains, between Lirigon and Pellinor.

So much for context: we read fiction primarily for stories concerning characters, not worldbuilding, and it is to people we now turn.

Cadvan is a Bard in exile. He bears a heavy guilt and, despite having made some reparations, has been banished from his bardic school in Lirigon. It is while following a lowly life in an out-of-the-way village that he is visited by the rival he tried to best in a foolishly conceived contest. Dernhil -- his former rival -- now tries to persuade Cadvan to clandestinely return from exile because things are awry: the very adversary that the bardic school at Lirigon had thought permanently defeated is now manifesting itself, to the danger of all the inhabitants of this world.

Croggan has recreated the sense of menace that characterised the sequels, and reintroduced us to some of the characters we knew from before. In particular Cadvan -- who figures eminently in the later books -- but also his mentor Nelac and his rival Dernhil all reappear; and we also get to meet a young bard Selmana, who is key to the problem of the Bone Queen (the Queen is like a dark version of a warrior goddess, an evil Athena as it were). It is good to be reacquainted with all these protagonists and to find out more of their backstories, their strengths and their foibles.

If you are expecting an all-action epic fantasy, be warned: The Bone Queen, much like the other books in the series, is heavy on conversations and internal debates. Events mostly move at a leisurely pace; incidents give us insights into characters without necessarily moving the action forward; there is much on physical exertion as well as the creature comforts, familiar from the previous books, that Croggan delights in -- such as food, drink and warm baths. But if you are new to Pellinor and yet manage to survive till the end of The Bone Queen you'll want to know what follows, and what follows is on a much grander scale than anything here recounted. If nothing else there is the rest of Edil-Amarandh to explore.

*****

The Bone Queen is the prequel to the original Pellinor Quartet but is now renumbered as the First Book. It sets out the circumstances surrounding Cadvan's disgrace, the ripples from which affect the later books. The following episodes are called The Gift (also known as The Naming), The Riddle, The Crow and The Singing -- all links are to reviews.

http://wp.me/p2oNj1-23f
show less
I loved the Books of Pellinor, but sadly cannot say the same of this prequel. I struggled to get into it at all, and eventually resorted to heavy skimming just to get through the book. The luminosity that came through the prose of the original four books is lacking here.

Members

Recently Added By

Author Information

Picture of author.
29+ Works 7,353 Members
Alison Croggon was born in the Transvaal, South Africa in 1962. She worked as a journalist for the Melbourne Herald until 1985. Her first book of poems, This Is the Stone, was published in 1991 and won the Anne Elder Award and the Dame Mary Gilmore Prize. Her other books of poetry include The Blue Gate, Attempts at Being, The Common Flesh: New and show more Selected Poems, and Theatre. She also writes the children's fantasy series Pellinor. Her children's novel, The River and the Book, won the 2016 Wilderness Society Environment Award for Children¿s Literature, Fiction. She is Melbourne theatre critic for The Australian and keeps a blog of theatre criticism called Theatre Notes. In 2009, she was named Geraldine Pascall Critic of the Year. She has also written and had preformed nine theatrical works including the operas Gauguin and The Burrow, and the plays Lenz, Samarkand and The Famine, and Blue. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Awards and Honors

Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Bone Queen
Original publication date
2016-02-18

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Teen, Fantasy, Young Adult
DDC/MDS
823.92Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-2000-
LCC
PZ7 .C8765 .BLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
149
Popularity
216,178
Reviews
2
Rating
(3.23)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
10
ASINs
4