The Spirit Stone

by Katharine Kerr

The Silver Wyrm (2), The Dragon Mage (5), Deverry Cycle (13 (Silver Wyrm 2))

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When a new threat emerges, Prince Dar of the Westlands must call upon his dwarven and human allies for help when the goddess Alshandra gives his vast lands to his ancient enemies, the Horsekin, and orders the slaughter of his people.

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6 reviews
Book five of the Dragon Mage sequence by Katharine Kerr. The events in this book follow on directly from those in the Gold Falcon - the joint armies of Westfolk, Deverry men and Mountain Folk are mustering in order to put Zakh Gral (the Horsekin fortress) to the sword. This time round we leave the stories of Branna and Neb, who remain behind at the dun. Instead Salamander and Dallandra come to the fore - dealing with a group of Gel da Thae who have been banished for using dweomer by those who follow Alshandra; finding and trying to discover the secrets of the black pyramid and the white; and trying to cure Rori's wounds.

I enjoyed this tale, finding a number of new story strands to enjoy and seeing where Kerr is filling some of the gaps show more from previous stories. For instance, we went back in time here to when Salamander was merely Evan (in his mother's language) and Ebany (in his father's) - a child of only a few years. It was a time where Dallandra had already gone to the Guardians and her son Loddlaen was growing up - where Nevyn realises that Loddlaen has suffered through being in Dalla's womb when she first travelled with Evandar and went to different worlds. It was interesting seeing how Loddlaen turned from an odd young man who struggled with dweomer to someone who was prepared to commit murder (eventually becoming the deranged mage we met at the time that Jill and Rhodry first came together).

Speaking of that, Branna and Rori also experience a heart breaking scene, where Branna only remembers that JIll was once friends with Rhodry before he turned dragon, and nothing more than that while Rori knows what truly passed between them.

Another fantastic scene was where Dalla tries to explain to Gerran the nature of war and the fact that no side will truly win since both commits atrocities in the name of what they believe in. Very strong and powerful.

In fact, there were only few bits to this novel that I found wearisome. One was actually the "war" against the Horsekin in Zakh Gral. It has been built up over the last book and a half to be something huge and menacing, yet was over extremely quickly and with very little loss of life or danger to the Westfolk/Deverry men. I understand the war is not yet over, but I did feel as though there would be more tension.

So, onto the next book in Kerr's neverending cycle - although I do see the finishing line now! In the next book I anticipate more of Rori and the rediscovery of Haen Marn!

P.S. I've no doubt that to anyone who has not read the previous books in the Deverry sequence this review is so much garbled mess, of characters and storylines that don't make much sense. For this reason I would urge people strongly to start with Daggerspell and move forwards in written order.

If anyone is trying to decide whether to read the Deverry books based on my review, I cannot recommend them highly enough. They are rich with details - realistic characters, political viewpoints, magic, adventure, romance, the Seelie, Elves, Dwarves, Dragons. Truly, there are few fantasy series that truly deserve the description "epic", but this is one of them. I believe that Kerr is enormously under-rated and has quietly put out one of the most accomplished long-running series in the field. Please don't miss out!
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9/10
Solidly entertaining, this installment in the Deverry Cycle moves the plot forward and ties in another set of earlier incarnations and younger years of some of the main characters.
Continuing the story

I have no idea how the author keeps everyone clear in her head. I find myself getting confused about which characters are from which time period. Still love this series.
Spannend vervolg op Goudvalk. Hoewel er erg veel verhaallijnen zijn, is het wel boeiend. Ook weer met een sprong naar het verleden waardoor sommige verhaallijnen uit eerdere delen weer verder worden uitgediept. Helaas ben ik ook erg veel weer vergeten uit die eerdere delen. Als je aan Deverry begint is het zaak om door te lezen. Ik ben nu wel erg benieuwd naar het volgende deel.
Deel 13 in deze serie en weer een heerlijk boek. Er zitten wat heel aparte wendingen in, die alleen maar nog nieuwsgieriger maken naar het einde van deze serie. Want waar gaat het naar toe? Gelijk maar verder in deel 14.
'Een dolk op onze keel.' Zo noemt prins Dar van de Westlanden de nieuwe vesting Zhak Gral, die is opgetrokken door het Paardenvolk, de eeuwenoude vijanden van de mens. Om deze dreiging ongedaan te maken, doet de elfenprins een beroep op zijn bondgenoten: het dwergenvolk van de noordelijke bergstreek en het mensvolk van Deverry. Maar het vastbesloten paardenvolk weet zich gesteund door de machtigste bondgenoot van allemaal: de godin Alshandra.

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61+ Works 21,127 Members
Katharine Kerr was born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1944. Her maiden name was Katharine Nancy Brahtin. After dropping out of Stanford University in the mid-1960s, Kerr worked in a number of low-paying jobs, including a stint at the U.S. Post Office. In 1976, a friend gave Kerr her first fantasy role-playing game and she became so intrigued with both show more gaming and the fantasy field that she began writing articles for gaming magazines. After working as a contributing editor for Dragon Magazine, as well as contributing to gaming modules for both TSR, Inc., and Chaos, Inc., Kerr turned her attention exclusively to fiction writing. Kerr is best known for her historical fantasy Deverry Series novels, published by Bantam and HarperCollins. Titles include Daggerspell, Darkspell, Dawnspell: The Bristling Wood, and Dragonspell: The Southern Sea. Kerr also developed The Westlands Cycle series for HarperCollins. Among the titles of some of those novels are A Time to Exile, A Time of Omens, and Days of Blood and Fire. Some of Kerr's other science fiction novels include Polar City Blues, Palace, and Freeze Frames and she has also edited three short-story anthologies. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Lee, Jody A. (Cover artist)
Taylor, Geoff (Cover artist)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Spirit Stone
Original publication date
2007
People/Characters*
Nevyn; Jill; Rhodry Maelwaedd; Prins Dar
Important places
Deverry (fictional)
Dedication
For all my readers
without whom this series would not have existed
First words
Two men of the mountain folk sat on a ledge halfway up a cliff and took the sun.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)What precisely it was, she couldn't remember, and no more did she mourn the thing itself, but she wept, anyway, just a scatter of tears for all the honor and love that the river of Time sweeps away in its scouring flow.
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Fantasy
DDC/MDS
813.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English2000-
LCC
PS3561 .E642 .S65Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
561
Popularity
52,660
Reviews
6
Rating
(4.05)
Languages
Dutch, English, German
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
13
ASINs
4