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A fantasy adventure of two young people in Elvenbane, a land of humans, dragons, shapechangers and other fantastic creatures. The land is ruled by oppressive lords who have the power to remold a person's body or mind. By the authors of Elvenbane.

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9 reviews
This second book continues right along with the same style of the first. If you didn't like [b:The Elvenbane|176892|The Elvenbane (Halfblood Chronicles, #1)|Andre Norton|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1316728082s/176892.jpg|2202795], then you won't like this either.

However, if you did enjoy Elvenbane, chances are pretty good you'll enjoy this book. Same set of characters thrown in with a new set so the authors don't have to worry about creating complex, deep characters. Make 'em and use 'em.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book for what it is, a shallow fantasy book that has no pretensions of being epic. You need those sometimes...
In this, the second part of the Elven Bane diptych, Shana and the other half elven make their way into the wildlands where they start working on a new fortress to protect themselves from the still mighty, and even more paranoid, Elven lords. As the initial fear of the elves wears off, some of the older half elven wizards decide that things should start returning to normal, i.e., the way it was before they had been uncovered. But Shana, the rest of the former apprentices, and crucially, the dragons, weren't going to have this. Shana finds the politics overwhelming and decides to go off on a scouting trip that was more like a holiday outing. Meanwhile, back in elven held lands, realising they weren't locating anywhere near all the half show more bloods (and if you thought this was insulting in Harry Potter, you ain't seen anything yet!), the High Lords realise they would have to test all their offspring for illusions hiding their true essence, so one half elven youngster has to go on the run. dragging along his full-elven half sister and her maid who claimed to have intel on how to get them to dragonland. After a fair bit of plot twists that see Shana and her party (a human psi and two dragons) taken ridiculously easily prisoners by the mythical Iron People, then the half elf and his sister also find the same group though disguised as the definitely no longer existing Corn People, former allies of the Iron People as the latter were driven out of their ancestral lands, they are treated better. Meanwhile, an Iron People internal power struggle between the popular War Leader and the older Iron Priest is stirred up by Myre, Keman's twisted little sister, who was also stirring up trouble in the Wizards' new lair.

After quite a few scrapes along the way, Shana's expanded party find their way back home, come up with a plan on how to defeat the High Elven Lords' attack on the wizards and live happily ever after.

After the great deal of detail Norton and Lackey went into in the first two thirds of the book, it isn't unfair to say that that last paragraph was almost as much detail as was given to that part of the story (OK a bit hyperbolic but not too much so!). Upto that point, it is a great book and in places it makes you hold your breath, though nether author ever seriously imperil a major character - if this had been George RR Martin on the other hand...! I had the feeling in the first book that this was our Earth that had suffered the calamity of the elven invasion but in this book, Shana's world felt like a more generic secondary world.
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½
This was a good read that took us all across the land. Their were different races, and magic styles that created of vibrant world. I thought the scenery of the fete in this book was gorgeous, to bad the company wasn't great. I felt some scenes were drug out too long, and other elements like the romances seem quick to happen seemingly coming out of no where. The dragon battle was beautifully written. You could really get in your mind how it would look. The painted a dour picture of the life of the citizens of an oppressive eleven male household, and the dangers for those trying to usurp them.
Thinking about this book after reading her Alta series, this one falls short. It's the same type of storyline, but with a Pern type twist that didn't quite do it for me. I remember being kind of bored with this series when I compared it to M. Lackey's other work. Maybe the author collaboration just wasn't working for me?
Benevolent dragons. Spoiled brat elves. Evil unicorns.... what's not to like??
Started a bit slow but good concepts, characters and story. Will seek sequel...
Not very riveting but will entertain when there is nothing else around.

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436+ Works 76,221 Members
Born Alice Mary Norton on February 17, 1912 in Cleveland, Ohio, she legally changed her name to Andre Alice Norton in 1934. She attended the Flora Stone Mather College of Western Reserve University (now Case Western Reserve) for a year then took evening courses in journalism and writing that were offered by Cleveland College, the adult division of show more the same university. Norton was a librarian for the Cleveland Library System then a reader at Gnome Press. After that position, she became a full-time writer. She is most noted for writing fantasy, in particular the Witch World series. Her first book The Prince of Commands was published in 1934. Other titles include Ralestone Luck, Magic in Ithkar, Voorloper, Uncharted Stars, The Gifts of Asti and All Cats are Gray. She also wrote under the pen names Andre Norton, Andrew North and Allen Weston She was the first woman to receive the Gandalf Grand Master of Fantasy and the Nebula Grand Master Award. She has also received a Phoenix Award for overall writing achievement, a Jules Verne Award, and a Science Fiction Book Club Book of the Year Award for her title The Elvenbane. In 1997 she was inducted into the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame. She died on March 17, 2005. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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357+ Works 187,707 Members
Fantasy fiction author Mercedes Richie Lackey was born in Chicago on June 24, 1950, and she received a B.S. from Purdue University in 1972. She is also a professional lyricist and has rehabilitated raptors. Lackey started writing her own short stories when her favorite science fiction and fantasy authors weren't producing new books fast enough for show more her. She began writing professionally with the encouragement of author C. J. Cherryh, whom Lackey had met at a science fiction convention. Many of Lackey's books, including the Queen's Own trilogy, the Vows and Honor series, Valdemar: family Spies, and the Last Herald-Mage and Mage Winds trilogies, take place in the imaginary world of Valdemar. She has authored numerous series, including the Bardic Voices series and a series of occult mysteries featuring Diana Tregarde, a modern-day witch. Lackey enjoys collaborating and has co-written books with authors such as C.J. Cherryh, Anne McCaffrey, Piers Anthony, Marion Zimmer Bradley, Mark Shepherd, and Ru Emerson. Her title Redoubt made The New York Times Best Seller List for 2012. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Taylor, Geoff (Cover artist)
Vallejo, Boris (Cover artist)
Vigesaa, Aasne (Narrator)

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Genres
Fantasy, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
813.52Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991900-1945
LCC
PS3527 .O632 .E43Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1900-1960
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11,230
Reviews
8
Rating
½ (3.67)
Languages
English
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Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
15
ASINs
15