Photo de l'auteur

Claudia J. Edwards (1943–2010)

Auteur de Taming the Forest King

4 oeuvres 431 utilisateurs 12 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Séries

Œuvres de Claudia J. Edwards

Taming the Forest King (1987) 140 exemplaires
Eldrie the Healer (1988) 115 exemplaires
Bright and Shining Tiger (1988) 93 exemplaires
A Horsewoman in Godsland (1988) 83 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Edwards, Claudia J.
Nom légal
Edwards, Claudia Jane
Date de naissance
1943
Date de décès
2010-05-05
Sexe
female
Nationalité
USA
Courte biographie
Claudia Jane Edwards

Membres

Critiques

I picked this one up off my own bookshelf--not sure if it floated in on my husband's fantasy collection, or I picked it up in a used bookstore, but there it was. This is pure popcorn for ladies who like fantasy and romance, nothing too exceptional, but I was entertained.
 
Signalé
auldhouse | 7 autres critiques | Oct 29, 2021 |
A stand-alone fantasy set in the same world as Taming the Forest King.

Runa is exiled from her kingdom, under penalty of death for witchcraft if she returns. She heads east - across a mountain range and desert until she reaches grasslands. There she is claimed by the Silvercat, the tuteletary beast of the Silvercat castellum to be the castellum’s mantic - the previous mantic and margrave having died and left no heirs. However, the rulers of the other castellas don’t like an outsider claiming the Silvercat castellum, and like it even less when she marries a barbarian as her margrave.

After beating off an attack of cannibals, Runa and her husband go horse hunting - horses being very important to the rulers of the castellas, and being in short supply. While in the wilderness, her husband is taken by a summoning spell arranged by the other rulers as they want Silvercat back in their hands. After various vicissitudes, Runa and her husband are reunited and settle in Silvercat.

Fairly light, but fun. Yes, it and the other Edwards I’ve reviewed are romances, but unlike the modern paranormals they aren’t in the least smutty. The world building is interesting - it looks like North America far in the future after our civilisation has collapsed, but this is never explicitly stated.

Recommended.
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Signalé
Maddz | 1 autre critique | Apr 29, 2018 |
This was the start of a series, but sadly Edwards died shortly after this was published and either never had a literary executor or the others in the series never existed in any meaningful sense.

Eldrie is a wandering healer, living by her wits and sword as much as her healing skills. She wanders the petty kingdoms of the Eastern seaboard of her world. She is caught up in a war in one of the kingdoms and in escaping it, 'acquires' an armsman, Huard, who subsequently becomes her lover. Wandering to the west, she attempts to find a healing mage in order to learn that skill. In the western deserts, the stumbles across such a person - a young and beautiful woman, Mennefer. Huard transfers his affections to Mennefer; it seems that Eldrie is the bastard daughter of the King of Maritiene and Huard insists on treating her as a princess first and person second. She eventually consents to return to Maritiene, taking an entourage with her - Huard and Mennefer, and an innkeeper and his wife who want to travel. The innkeeper is in fact a cartographer.

On her return to Maritiene, she discovers that the Heir is dead in a hunting accident, and her younger legitimate brother is now Heir. However, there is a problem - he's gay and doesn't have the King's Gifts (magical psychic powers) which Eldrie does. In fact, there's some doubt whether her brother is in fact the King's son, the Queen having taken a lover by the time he was conceived (although the boy was acknowledged by the king). She is now needed to take up the duties of a Royal Princess, including an arranged marriage.

Compared to Edwards' other books, this is obviously the first of a series. There's a lot unexplained, and the ending is very unsatisfactory for a stand-alone. I also had issues with some of the plot lines, especially the way her relationship with Huard played out. It read to me as scene-setting for a sequel which ended up never seeing the light of day because of her death. It also struck me that 16 years was too long for her to have spent wandering to suddenly (apparently out of the blue) try and find a healer mage to learn from. Admittedly, she did not become a healer until she left Maritiene aged 16, but even so...

I won't say Recommended, but it's worth reading if you like Edwards' other works; the others work better as they're stand-alones.
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Signalé
Maddz | Apr 16, 2018 |
This is an unusual book; it's a romance set in a fantasy world (which may be post-apocalyptic North America) with supernatural creatures and magic.

Tevra, a Colonel of Light Cavalry is sent by the King to what used to be a separate kingdom but is now the Northern province of the Empire. As Viceroy, she needs to sort out problems there - the province has been going it's own way for some time and now needs reining in. She is accompanied by her long-time second in command, Hetwith.

In the Forest Kingdom, she capably sets about relieving the famine, plague and supernatural attacks, and is assisted by Dard, grandson of the last Forest King. He hopes to make her his queen of an independent Forest Kingdom but Hetwith has other ideas.

Light, but charming. In some ways, the story and setting remind me of the Sharing Knife series by Lois McMast Bujold.

Recommended.
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Signalé
Maddz | 7 autres critiques | Apr 16, 2018 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
4
Membres
431
Popularité
#56,717
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
12
ISBN
8
Favoris
1

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