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Blood of Amber (Amber Chronicles #7) by…
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Blood of Amber (Amber Chronicles #7) (original 1986; edition 1987)

by Roger Zelazny

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1,896168,781 (3.85)14
Merle Corey, hero of Trumps of Doom (1985), escapes from prison with the help of a woman who has many shapes. This is the seventh Amber novel.
Member:ScoLgo
Title:Blood of Amber (Amber Chronicles #7)
Authors:Roger Zelazny
Info:Avon Books (1987), Mass Market Paperback, 224 pages
Collections:DTB, To read, Your library
Rating:
Tags:fantasy

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Blood of Amber by Roger Zelazny (1986)

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English (14)  French (1)  Dutch (1)  All languages (16)
Showing 1-5 of 14 (next | show all)
F/SF
  beskamiltar | Apr 10, 2024 |
This is the seventh Amber novel by Zelazny, and the second in the follow-up five-book sequence about Corwin's son Merlin. In this book, Merlin, also called Merle, escapes the prison where his 'friend' Luke stowed him - at the end of previous book, Luke was revealed to be the son of Brand, the psychotic Amberite who tried to destroy the others in the original series. He is seeking revenge for his father, who the others had no choice but to kill, but it seems he's mixed-up because although he was responsible for the first few assassination attempts against Merle, committed every 30th April over about 8 years, he apparently stopped and someone else, possibly his mother, took over later. Merle discovers in this volume that various odd characters who approached him in book 1 are actually people who have been possessed by an entity who claims to want to protect him. That entity finally breaks cover and agrees to an exchange of information, but as Merlin insists on a quid pro quo, the sequence where they laboriously trade snippets is very tedious.

The plot of the present volume is rambling in the extreme. Zelazny could obviously write - I loved a section of description where Merlin walks down by the docks en route to a restaurant - but seemed here to be going through the motions plot-wise. A lot happens including blow-by-blow fight sequences which I found confusing and also unconvincingly detailed for someone caught up in the adrenaline of a fight, various people try to kill Merle and he spends a lot of time discussing who this could be and also refusing to confide in people, including his uncle Random, now King of Amber, who might be able to help him. Yet he naively trusts Luke who has admitted to making attempts on his life and appears to continue to have his own agenda. A lot of characters arrive and depart, almost on a revolving door basis, and don't add much to the story, and more are introduced in passing - e.g. two more siblings of his fathers turn up in the form of Trumps (the cards the royal family use to contact each other) whom I believe were mentioned in the first series as being thought dead long before Corwin was born - and I would guess these characters probably feature in later volumes. There are sudden rather jarring flashbacks to Merlin's upbringing at the Courts of Chaos where he had terrible fights with a person who hated him for no apparent reason his brother and it seems pretty obvious that the shape-shifting sorcerer who trails him in this volume and eventually attacks him must be that person, yet he doesn't draw the obvious inference even when he thinks back to how this person behaved. Instead he is unable to work out who might be trying to kill him, despite the fact that this person tried at least twice when they were growing up, once by trying to shoot him in the back.

It is also far too 'easy' for Merle compared to his father - in the earlier story, Corwin was enough of a superhero: he had the ability to travel through Shadow, that is, from world to world, was a master swordsman, had above human healing powers, an extended lifespan (when banished to our Earth, he lived there for hundreds of our years), and could use the Trumps - special cards developed by his grandfather - some of these abilities developed through walking the Pattern, an energy grid used to bring the worlds into being originally. All these powers were shared with his siblings and made his family powerful enough, in my opinion. But Merlin also inherits powers from his mother Dara who is one of the Chaos party, so he can use something called the Logrus to create spells including an invisibility one, and he can shape-shift into other forms including that of an apparently fearsome beast (he uses this ability to best a demon at one point though it isn't shown as the chapter ends and the next one switches to after he has done so). He can also reach into Shadow and pull out new clothes whenever he needs them or a sword or just about anything else he needs. Frankly, this makes him far too boring a character and his general naive stupidity doesn't endear him to the reader either.

The book ends as its predecessor did - Merlin is now a prisoner somewhere, this time in a very surreal placeLewis Carroll's Wonderland. With the lack of real character development or a half-decent plot, I can't believe it would be worth the bother of tracking down the final three volumes of this (I have only the first two) as there is no real incentive to read on. ( )
  kitsune_reader | Nov 23, 2023 |
Het zijn absoluut intrigerende boeken en ook goed geschreven, maar totaal emotieloos en dat maakt dat ik er totaal geen probleem mee heb om een deel zo lang te laten liggen. Drie sterren dus, ondanks de kwaliteiten van het boek. ( )
  weaver-of-dreams | Aug 1, 2023 |
One thing I noticed early on in the series that I've failed to mention is that when Zelazny moves his character through shadow it reads almost like poetry, not the forced trying to be like Tolkien poetry that once fantasy writer seemed to have to insert to have a "proper" fantasy. The descriptions aren't formatted like poetry it just sounds like a very poetic movement. ( )
1 vote kevn57 | Dec 8, 2021 |
iets beter dan het vorige deel. ( )
  EdwinKort | Oct 18, 2019 |
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» Add other authors (3 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Zelazny, Rogerprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Burr, LindaCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Magnin, FlorenceCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Targete, Jean PierreCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Taylor, GeoffCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
White,TimCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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For Kirby McCauley
First words
My life had been relatively peaceful for eight years-not counting April thirtieths, when someone invariably tried to kill me.
Quotations
Things fall apart; the center cannot hold. But what the hell, it's home.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Information from the French Common Knowledge. Edit to localize it to your language.
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Merle Corey, hero of Trumps of Doom (1985), escapes from prison with the help of a woman who has many shapes. This is the seventh Amber novel.

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