The Book of Atrix Wolfe

by Patricia A. McKillip

On This Page

Description

{STARRED REVIEW} "McKillip's signature talents are on full display in this wondrous tale." -Foreword This brand new edition celebrates the 30th anniversary of a classic, luminous novel from the World Fantasy Award-winning author Patricia A. McKillip (The Forgotten Beasts of Eld). Discover the spellbinding legend of generational atonement and redemption between a reluctant mage, a powerful wizard, a struggling heir, fae royalty, and a mysterious scullery maid. When the White Wolf descends show more upon the battlefield, the results are disastrous. His fateful decision to end a war with powerful magic changes the destiny of four kingdoms: warlike Kardeth, resilient Pelucir, idyllic Chaumenard, and the mysterious Elven realm. Twenty years later, Prince Talis, orphaned heir to Pelucir, is meant to be the savior of the realm. However, the prince is neither interested in ruling nor a particularly skilled mage. Further, he is obsessed with a corrupted spellbook, and he is haunted by visions from the woods. The legendary mage Atrix Wolfe has forsaken magic and the world of men. But the Queen of the Wood, whose fae lands overlap Pelucir's bloody battlefield, is calling Wolfe back. Her consort and her daughter have been missing since the siege, and if Wolfe cannot intervene, the Queen will keep a sacrifice for her own. Patricia Anne McKillip, widely considered one of fantasy's finest writers, was the bestselling author of more than thirty adult and children's fantasy novels, including The Riddle-Master of Hed, Harpist in the Wind, and The Bards of Bone Plain. Her short fiction has most recently been collected in Wonders of the Invisible World and Dreams of Distant Shores. McKillip received three World Fantasy Awards, for The Forgotten Beasts of Eld, Ombria in Shadow, and Solstice Wood, for the latter of which she also received the Mythopoeic Award. She was also recognized with the World Fantasy Award for lifetime achievement. Born in Salem, Oregon, McKillip lived in Germany, the UK, and the Catskills in New York. Kathleen Jennings (cover art) has won the World Fantasy Award, and has been shortlisted for the Hugo and Locus Awards. She has also received the E. G. Harvey and several Ditmar Awards. Many of her illustrations and incidental drawings appear on her blog Jennings lives in Brisbane, Australia. {STARRED REVIEW} "McKillip's signature talents are on full display in this wondrous tale, wherein memories of 'barren crags and ancient forests, winds scented with honey, wolf, wildflowers, swift water so pure' can be summoned as a force for good, and love is an articulation of guileless recognition of another." -Foreword "No writer has better captured the elusive power of language than Patricia A. McKillip. The Book of Atrix Wolfe is a shimmering tale of language, power, magic, and soul." -Rambles "Prince Talis, heir to the Pelucir throne, has been away from his homeland studying magecraft. At the wizards' college, he discovers a mysterious book of spells whose words carry hidden meanings. Returning to Pelucir, Talis encounters the Queen of the Woods, who is looking for her daughter, Sorrow, lost ever since the mage Atrix Wolfe misused his magic to divert a war. Now Talis and Atrix must solve the riddle of Sorrow's existence, and rid the world of the evil that Atrix {McKillip's} words and images remain masterfully evocative as she manages to invoke great beauty using the simplest language. Connoisseurs of fine fantasy will delight in this expertly wrought tale." -Publishers Weekly "A spell woven from moonlight, dirty pots, golden leaves, and shadows. Patricia McKillip describes magic I can believe in-the magic of place, captured in the stones of a wall, the wood of a door, the light shining through a window, the reflection in a pot of water." -Pat Murphy, Nebula and H... show less

Tags

Recommendations

Member Recommendations

ncgraham Both of these McKillip novels deal with changelings and the power of words, and so make for fascinating comparison.
30

Member Reviews

25 reviews
Patricia McKillip’s The Book of Atrix Wolfe is another of her standard fare — excellent writing, poetic language, atmospheric settings, and interesting characters. It is, in a word, wonderful. The great mage Atrix Wolfe is drawn into using sorcery to help the king of Kardeth defeat Pelucir. Though using sorcery is strictly forbidden in war, Atrix Wolfe believes that it will end the carnage more quickly. But what he makes that night on Hunter’s Field brutally slays every living thing in its path with a ferocity shocking even its maker. It exists thereafter in horrific memory for over twenty years, and the ghosts of that horrible night are not laid. Atrix Wolfe is devastated at what he has done and disappears from the mage world. show more Twenty years later, a book he wrote is discovered in Chaumenard (how I love McKillip’s place names) by Talis Pelucir, the son of Pelucir’s king who was killed that night on Hunter’s Field. Talis returns to the castle at Pelucir where his older brother Burne rules. The book has a strange power that leads Talis down dangerous roads as he seeks to eradicate the evil that still haunts Hunter’s Field.

Intertwined with Talis’ story is that of Saro, the waxen-faced, slow-witted scullery maid who works in the great kitchens at the castle. Saro was found twenty years ago outside the castle, a strange child who could not speak. There is something odd about her; she is completely unremarkable and her face seems to shift under your eyes so you can’t remember it. Her life is a pathetic drudgery; she scrubs pots all day in the kitchens and speaks no word to anyone. But when she is forced to take Talis’ tray up to the haunted keep where he works, she begins to awaken. Something in Atrix Wolfe’s book calls to her and when Talis goes missing, she sees visions of him in her scrubber’s cauldron. The truth of who the Hunter is and what really happened that night on Hunter’s Field falls into place with a startling intensity. Saro truly is “someone’s sorrow,” as the kitchen workers call her.

The story is slow in some parts but I savored the beauty of the writing. McKillip is an amazing writer and knows how to conjure a mood with fewer words than any other fantasy author I know. This story is no exception. It’s well worth your time, and I suspect the strength of the writing will sustain many rereads. Recommended.
show less
Atrix Wolfe, mage and shapechanger, in an attempt to save his homeland, made a terrible mistake-- one that destroyed a number of people, and, it seems, continues to tangle others in its strands. Saro, unspeaking kitchen pot-girl. Talis, shapechanger student and son of the dead king of Pelucir. The Hunter. The Queen of the Wood. And perhaps Atrix Wolfe himself. The answers might lie in a book of magic written by Atrix Wolfe-- but everything Talis tries out of it backfires dangerously.
McKillip's usual bright flashes of poetry dart in and out of this fairy tale, with flickering ghosts of destruction and fleeting glimpses of another world-- but to more purpose than in some of her books; you can follow the story. There is a large helping of show more 'people don't communicate when that would be helpful' in this story (another trend in McKillip), but that's achingly familiar to those who have grown up in the tangles of someone else's old trauma.
Talis isn't as vivid as most of McKillip's heroes, but Saro makes up for it. Saro, and Saro's world, the kitchen of a great house.
show less
In The Book of Atrix Wolfe a mage attempts to stop a war and in doing so creates something that is bigger and more terrible than he intended. Twenty years later a young mage and a mute scullery maid must live with the effect of his actions.

I love McKillip's writing — the language she uses; the pictures she creates and the stories she tells. It is simply and stunningly beautiful. Yes there are common themes running through her books - the uses and abuses of power; finding yourself; magic, enchantment and secrets - but in each story she puts a new and fresh twist to the story. Creating something so amazingly good that I am swept away by her imagery and magic. In my opinion this is fantasy at its best.
This was not mere escapist fantasy, but ideas, poetry in prose form. I felt wrapped in fire, surrounded by silk, drowned in darkness and raised by light. I must read more...
Patricia A. McKillip's The Book of Atrix Wolfe is a unique story that centers primarily around an old and (incredibly) powerful mage named Atrix Wolfe, a mute scullery maid who the kitchen workers call Saro, and a teenage mage in the making, Talis. As a brief overview, without giving too much away, I will say that ths one-of-a-kind novel begins on an open field in the midst of a war between House Kardeth and House Pelucir. This is also where we first meet Atrix Wolfe, who is known as, perhaps, the most powerful mage in the world. In a moment of emotion and desperation, and in a time of cruelty and death, Atrix Wolfe gathers his energy and power to put an end to the rampant suffering and horror that surrounds Hunter's field. Little does show more he know, what he unleashes on that dark night is something terrible; something beyond his comprehension; something that will haunt him and everyone involved forever.

That's when the story flashes forward 20 years, and we meet young Talis, who is currently taking residence in Chaumenard to learn the art of sorcery. He also happens to be the son of the king Pelucir, who died on that tragic night on Hunter's field. After being called back to his home of Pelucir by his Brother, he leaves the mage's school; though not alone -- he takes something strange with him. An odd unmarked book he found one night; a book with no name or label, just vaguely written spells that seem to hold some sort of power. Little does he know, this is a book written by the one and only, Atrix Wolfe. A book which holds words of secret, and undesired meanings; A book that in itself, bears the scars of what happened on that fateful night. A book that holds a terrible power -- a power that could respark the horrible entity that ended the battle on Hunter's Field; a power that will change Talis's life and disturb the already haunted ruins of Pelicur once again.

Lastly, this is also where we meet Saro, a strange young Scullery made who works and sleeps in the kitchens of Pelicur. For Saro, her only language lay within the scrubbing of a pot or the stirring of a cauldron. For her, she has no words -- no voice -- the only thing she truly has is her job in the kitchens, and that job defines her completely. While she does respond to her name, which was given to her by the kitchen staff, "Saro", meaning, "someone's sorrow", she has never spoken since they found her on that horrible night; found naked, lost amongst a pile of wood. Though Saro is simply the pot cleaner, a girl who is rarely noticed -- she holds a strange secret past -- one that no one is aware of, not even herself. Though to the kitchen staff, her existence is simple; she never speaks, and all she knows of life and the world is her large washing cauldron, inside she is alive, aware, simply lost within her forgotten past. A past that will soon be revealed by Talis and Atrix Wolfe, who's lives all seemingly intertwine as the plot pushes fourth.

To say the least, Patricia McKillip is one talented and highly skilled author! Her writing style is both unique and genuinely her own -- it's deep, poetic, artistic, dream-like, etheareal, emotional. Her use of words is absolutely stunning, and she relies heavily on her atmospheric style to carry her story (and it works). I found this novel to be stylistically beautiful, and I found myself on numerous occasions re-reading what I had just read, only to think "wow.." Some moments were just so good, I had to re-read them. Not many authors do that to me.

Aside from the beauty of the writing itself, I also quite enjoyed the characters, which were all unique and interesting, especially Saro. While Atrix Wolfe and Talis were both great and compelling characters, and I certainly cared about what would happen to them; she was by far my favorite (despite the fact that she never spoke a word until the end of the book)! Some of the most touching and heart-breaking moments revolved around her, and the way McKillip portrayed her character as a mute -- speaking the language of the pots, understanding cleaning, food, everything else was drowned out sound, trying to choke up word..struggling.. etc..it was just so interesting. Her interaction between the kitchen crew..what they thought of her, getting an in depth feeling of what was going on in her mind, how she felt..how she saw things..her frustration.. I just can't praise this character enough. She's probably one of the most memorable characters I've read in a long time.

Though I enjoyed most aspects of this novel, especially her poetic, dream-like style, at the same time, I felt that in some areas it actually took away from the story itself -- detaching the reader from certain happenings. For instance, some of the action scenes didn't quite feel right in the way they were written -- almost as if they lacked a much needed intensity. Some were so metaphorically driven, it felt almost as if I were reading a poem rather than an actual moment of danger. Though I generally like this type of writing (hell, I'm a poet), I believe it would have been more affective if the action scenes were toned down a bit, written in a more straight forward fashion rather than the mist-like quality that filled most of this novel. Also, for whatever reason, in the beginning of the book, I had a hard time (for a short period) telling the characters apart. I didn't quite know who was who. Regardless of this, I felt the writing style helped far more than it hurt, and because of this, I was mesmerized and entranced from beginning to end.

All in all, this is a great book. From the hypnotic writing, to the great characters, to the unique plot -- this was an enchanting, well acomplished stand-alone fantasy piece. If you're looking for a one-of-a-kind fantasy novel with an excellent story (even mixed with a bit of folklore/mythology), you should definitely pick this up. Though I've only read one of McKillip's novels (SO FAR), I can say that she is a talented writer, and if you're looking for something a bit different stylistically, you'll get it from her. I recommend "The Book Of Atrix Wolfe" to anyone who's looking for a quick (though deep), unique read, that will hold you entranced and compelled straight from the beginning.
show less
Recommended. Not as good as Alphabet of Thorne, one of this story's chief charms are the long and detailed descriptions of food as a major kingdom's kitchen is one of the key set pieces. There's plenty of inventive fantasy here, dramatic moments, chases, dreamy sequences that don't annoy me, and characters that evoke empathy very successfully. The chief fault of the story is that not much seems to ever happen or matter. It is as if the entire plot occurs in the first chapter, and the rest of the story is about everyone figuring out what happened. Like a murder mystery? Anyway, all fault is forgiven because of all the things that Patricia McKillip does well. Wrapping myself up in the book was warm and fascinating. I just wish the show more dramatic reveals had anything left to reveal, which they didn't. But they could of! Oh Patricia, you kept raising the stakes, but they always felt like the same level! show less
A beautiful fairytale.

Atrix Wolfe is a powerful mage. Years ago, in an attempt to stop a war between two kingdoms, he conjured a terrible Hunter through sorcery... causing more death than, possibly, the war would have. In remorse and shame, he fled to the life of a hermit...

But now, a young prince in mage training has found his spellbook, and old sorceries are stirring.. And, for some reason, the beautiful Faerie Queen of the Wood is sending visions to both a boy and a mage...

Meanwhile, in the castle kitchens, a mute kitchen drudge called Saro labors endlessly over her dirty pots... and sees visions in the washwater...

Remarkable, as always, for the vivid poetics of McKillip's language, and the purity of her vision... Plus, this one has show more descriptions of the castle feasts that'll have your mouth watering!

I don't think this is McKillip's best book, but it's certainly a very good one.
show less

Members

Recently Added By

Lists

Recommended Faerie books
67 works; 22 members
KayStJ's to-read list
1,616 works; 11 members

Author Information

Picture of author.
77+ Works 29,554 Members

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Original title
The Book of Atrix Wolfe
Original publication date
1995
People/Characters
Atrix Wolfe; Talis Pelucir; Saro; Burne Pelucir; Queen of the Wood; The Hunter (show all 7); Ilyos
Important places
Pelucir; Chaumenard
First words
The White Wolf followed the ravens down the crags of Chaumenard to the wintry fields of Pelucir.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)She said, "Tell me all your names."
Blurbers
Donaldson, Stephen R.
Original language*
Englisch
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Fantasy, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3563 .C38 .B66Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
1,326
Popularity
18,123
Reviews
25
Rating
(4.03)
Languages
English, French, German
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
10
UPCs
1
ASINs
6