lareinenoire: (Crystal Ball)
[personal profile] lareinenoire
Read it in spurts over a two-day period -- damned work. At any rate, I think I will reread before posting a full-out review, but for now, here is what I've got to say.



I had been wondering ever since starting my reread of Mélusine last week when the opening story of Porphyria Levant and Silas Altamont would come into play. Initially, I thought it was meant to draw attention to Malkar's treatment of Felix -- the obligation de sang, as we now know its name. Except that the voice is very distinctively Mildmay's; Mildmay, who is not made aware of Felix and Malkar until much later.

So, a mystery. Until halfway through The Virtu, that is.

[livejournal.com profile] truepenny wrote an entry where she explained how The Virtu and Mélusine were initially one single volume called The Shadow of the Mirador. In light of that, so much of The Virtu makes perfect sense, especially the way single threads are picked back up after having been literally left behind in Mélusine during the first book.

Many of my questions in this entry were answered. Including my guess that the Mirador was a labyrinth -- go me! My guesses in general were far better with this book than they have been for previous books (i.e. Harry Potter, George R.R. Martin).

At any rate, moving on. I do like the distinction made between the obligation d'âme and the obligation de sang. The latter is, in some small way, voluntary. The soul, after all, is not part of the blood or the body, therefore it must be given. Is it generally a bad idea? Yes. However, there is no compulsion involved in the initial decision. The annemer has to ask for it. Now, I'm quite sure it's the sort of thing that can be -- and certainly is -- often badly manipulated, but if one looks at it completely objectively, it is a free-will decision. The obligation de sang, on the other hand, is forced. One need only look at Malkar and Felix to illustrate this. Malkar cast the obligation de sang on Felix, and Felix didn't even know he'd done it. Again, back to the Blood Magic Is Bad credo. Interesting how the obligation d'âme is not blood magic, but still heresy because it does create absolute control over another human being.

Malkar was Brinvillier Strych all along. *That* caught me by surprise. I was quite sure he and Vey Coruscant were working together; their apparently disparate plots in the first book were far too well-planned for coincidence. But I didn't guess that she *had* succeeded in bringing her old master to life, and that he'd been in the Mirador all along. Sneaky, sneaky.

And of course, Thamuris' prophecy. Mildmay trusted Felix, loved him, and Felix sent him off after Vey Coruscant without a second thought. Bad, bad Felix. I wanted to shake him repeatedly after that scene. He does have this rather annoying habit of doing something awful to Mildmay, feeling bad about it, apologising, and then doing it again five minutes later. But it is a realistic character trait, and I definitely have to give Sarah Monette credit for that. All the same, poor Mildmay.

I did like seeing a nice, strong female character in Mehitabel. And while I guessed that she'd eventually end up with Mildmay about ten seconds after she showed up, the journey was very nice. And I like how Gideon calms Felix down a little. The man needs it.

Again, with the small threads coming back. Mildmay's Keeper making an appearance toward the end; Rindleshin's cameo as they entered Mélusine; the return of Hugo Chandler, not to mention Cardenio; and I *knew* Malkar was going to aim for Stephen. It was simply the next logical step, and Malkar is nothing if not logical when it comes to his own ambitions. And the ghosts, of course. The dead will not stay dead.



As I said,a more detailed and coherent review later, once I've reread the book and let it sink in properly. But at the moment, all I really want to do is sit down with the author and pick her brain about how on earth to write such gorgeous and intricately structured novels.

Date: 2006-07-06 02:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] adelynne.livejournal.com
Yes, but at that time, Robert stood at higher esteem with Stephen at court. Now, while Stephen and Felix don't really like each other any more than they previously did, I'm willing to bet Stephen's well aware of who has done more for him.

They do now that they know he killed Cresset. :) And the whole point of it is that Felix can't act directly against a wizard (not even Vey, not even Malkar - that's why he claims Mildmay killed him), but Mildmay can - they don't burn annemers, and anything Mildmay does doesn't matter so long as Felix himself isn't treasonous. It's a very nifty legal fiction.

As for Felix not changing things... well, he could have restored the Virtu by relying on Necromancy, if he was all that fond of the status quo. In his own very self-centered way he is interested in bettering things.

Date: 2006-07-06 02:19 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Of course they know he'd killed Cresset! Why didn't I remember that?

I know they can't punish Mildmay if he kills a Mirador wizard but I'm sure they would evict Felix if Mildmay did so, assuming, probably correctly, that Felix had ordered it. And if he didn't then it's clearly not safe to let Felix hang around when he can't stop his tame assassin from killing people.

I wonder if they are going to find out that Mildmay killed one of the Teverii.

Felix sees necromancy as heresy so is at great pains to avoid it. Mind you, he wasn't expecting to have the Sim as a result.

Margaret

Date: 2006-07-06 02:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] adelynne.livejournal.com
Among the many other things Felix regards as heresy is the obligation d'âme and warding dreams. Cheap shot, but Felix is not above heresy when he disagrees with doctorine.

Date: 2006-07-06 02:58 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
But it wasn't, technically speaking, heresy when he did them.

Margaret

Date: 2006-07-06 04:07 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] adelynne.livejournal.com
Okay, but the necromancy he performed to banish the ghouls? That was heresy. :)

Date: 2006-07-06 08:58 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Was it? I didn't get the impression that it was, or that Felix thought it was. I had the feeling that, for the Cabalines, heresy was any magic performed on living people.

Margaret

Date: 2006-07-06 09:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] adelynne.livejournal.com
No, he knew it was heresy and regarded it as such - that's why he was keen on getting Vey out of the way before going to Stephen - it was necromancy and it was heresy.

Date: 2006-07-06 10:30 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Ah that's right. Yes, it was a bit tricky for him: to fix the virtu Felix had the choice of:
a) using the existing anchor which would require necromancy (heresy)
b) removing the existing anchor which would require necromancy (heresy)

He couldn't fix the virtu without using heresy so he went for option b which would negate the original act of heresy rather than a which would support it.

Margaret

Date: 2006-07-06 02:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fidelioscabinet.livejournal.com
SInce Cornell's death was arranged through the Mirador, I suspect the rest of the family at least cannot claim to think it's a bad thing, if face-to-face with Mildmay. Of course, the average Cabaline's mileage may vary, there.
I've always wondered who the contact was, and who decided it needed doing--whether Stephen was entirely out of the loop, or if someone like Robert (who strikes me as having more dirt in his past than he'd care to admit to) handled things for him--or if it was Victoria's or Shannon's idea. Victoria strikes me as willing to do what needs doing, as long as she can act later like she didn't, and I suspect Shannon has a lot more steel in him than anyone realizes.

Profile

lareinenoire: (Default)
lareinenoire

October 2017

S M T W T F S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031    

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 7th, 2025 02:35 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios