Geomancer

by Ian Irvine

The Well of Echoes (book 1), The Three Worlds Cycle (05 (Well of Echoes 01))

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Two hundred years after the Forbidding was broken, Santhenar is locked in war with the lyrinx-intelligent, winged predators from the void who will do anything to gain their own world. Despite the development of battle clankers and mastery of the crystals that power them, humanity is losing. The enemy is destroying their nodes of power, one by one.Tiaan, a lonely crystal worker, is experimenting with a new type of crystal when she begins to have extraordinary visions. The crystal has woken show more her talent for geomancy, the most powerful of the Secret Arts, and the most perilous. Geomancy is a magic that humanity's allies and enemies alike are desperate to control, but it is deadly to the user.Falsely accused of sabotage by her rival, Irisis, Tiaan flees for her life. She is hunted by the alien lyrinx, Ryll, who plans to use her in his dreadful flesh-forming experiments. Only geomancy can save her. Struggling to control her talent, Tiaan follows her visions all the way to Tirthrax, greatest peak in the Three Worlds, where a nightmare awaits her... show less

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6 reviews
I picked this up as part of a returning-to-YA-classics because I was looking for something lighter to read while falling asleep. Geomancer is unfortunately less good than I remember it being. The characters are almost unanimously unlikable, have no arcs, and don't actually learn anything in the hundred thousand pages that this book feels like. Irvine's plot points out lots of odd things --- most notably a character's father being in bed with another man, at which our narrator is "disgusted!" --- and then doesn't do anything with them. The 75% of the book is long and slow, and spends a lot of time with our main character dealing with an addiction, that she never solves, and is repeatedly used against her, by the same people, to show more accomplish the same goal. And then the last quarter goes SUPER FAST where everyone manages to cross the whole damn continent on foot in a few pages and then open up a damn hole in the universe and get her sister killed and then be betrayed and sell out humanity. All in like 100 pages. My guess is that this guy didn't have an editor.

All in all it's an OK read. The story is pretty interesting, but would be much better if it were 1/5th of the length.
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Tiaan lives in a world that has known nothing but war for 150 years. Humanity's enemy are the Lyrinx, huge, powerful and highly intelligent beings who are capable of flight and are very hard to kill. They seem to have appeared out of some alternate universe at some point, but that bit is never explained very well. Tiaan works in a grim factory, where she is a virtual slave, making the vast war machines that are mankind's only hope against the Lyrinx. She is an artisan, the most highly skilled of the workers at the factory, making the controllers that somehow harness the power of the natural world and channel them into the machines. No one takes the time to explain how this works, and indeed the characters themselves don't really seem to show more know, least of all Tiaan, but she is very good at it nevertheless. Life is hard for Tiaan and her fellow workers, but it is the only life she knows, and she's happy enough, until one day something happens that will set her life off on a radically new path.....taking her on an epic journey...harnessing powers she would never have believed it possible to control.....forcing her to travel to the very heart of the enemies' fortress....before her ultimate encounter that will change everything.....

Perhaps a bit harsh on the scoring, as it did carry me along nicely just when I needed something distracting and not too challenging. It was quite nicely written, and despite my sarky comments above, is quite original within the confines of this sort of narrative, plus it had some well drawn, complex characters. On the down side, the story sometimes lacked momentum - it had all the ingredients of a really cracking yarn, and several times it felt like it was ready to kick into a higher gear but then.....just fell short. It's really very violent, not something I would always take issue with, and I think the author perhaps included it here to show that although this is a fantasy novel, it's very much an adults only fantasy novel, but I just couldn't get past some of the deaths of key characters. The death toll in general was very high, and sometimes unnecessarily so in my opinion. There's one death right towards the end that just doesn't make any sense from an ongoing narrative point of view, and which annoyed me enough to lose this book 0.5 all on its own. This is the first part of the trilogy, and I'm currently undecided whether I care enough about the few remaining characters left alive to investigate parts 2 and 3. Perhaps, if like this one, I run across them in a charity shop at a bargain price, but otherwise perhaps not....
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½
This book went from interesting concept, to "12 year old that doesn't understand sex but really wants to also has no idea how women actually are in real life / sterotypes found in 1980's soap operas" in just a few chapters and I can't get that part of my life back ever again.
8/10
Book 1 in the Well of Echoes series, set in the same world as the author’s View from the Mirror quartet. There are some references to the previous series, which is set 200 years prior to this book, but the characters and plot seem separate from that earlier series, at least in this first book.

The characters are interesting and three-dimensional; the narrative follows Tiann, Nish, and Irisis with chapters from their points of view. The world of Santhenar is populated by humans but there are other sentient humanoid species as well. Plenty of action propels the story forward, but it’s balanced with some introspection by the POV characters.

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Ian Irvine is a LibraryThing Author, an author who lists their personal library on LibraryThing.

Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Geomancer
Original title
Geomancer
Original publication date
2001-09
People/Characters
Tiaan Liise-Mar; Irisis Stirm; Cryl-Nish Hlar (nicknamed Nish); Ryll (lyrinx); Liett (lyrinx)
Dedication
To Simon
First words
Tiaan could hear her foreman's fury from halfway across the manufactory.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)'The end of our humanity.'

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Fantasy
DDC/MDS
813Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English
LCC
PR9619.3 .I7Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish LiteratureEnglish literature: Provincial, local, etc.
BISAC

Statistics

Members
560
Popularity
52,675
Reviews
6
Rating
½ (3.53)
Languages
English, German
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
16
UPCs
1
ASINs
7