Lord of the Darkwood (Tale of Shikanoko #3) by Lian Hearn

Posted: April 21, 2017 in Book Review
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shika3

I just loooooove these covers!

Publisher Description of Series

A self-assured warrior stumbles into a game of Go that turns fatal. An ambitious lord leaves his nephew for dead and seizes his lands. A stubborn father forces his son to give up his wife to his older brother. A powerful priest meddles in the succession to the Lotus Throne. A woman of the Old People seeks five fathers for her five children, who will go on to found the Spider Tribe and direct the fate of the country.

As destiny weaves its tapestry in Lian Hearn’s Tale of Shikanoko series, an emotionally rich and compelling drama plays out against a background of wild forests, elegant castles, hidden temples, and savage battlefields in Lord of the Darkwood.

About :

Lord of the Darkwood, the third installment of the four-part medieval Japanese fantasy serial The Tale of Shikanoko, covers an enormous amount of time considering its small size of 220 pages: over a decade. As the older power-players of the empire die out, a younger and equally-ambitious set of players matures and takes over. This book covers that shift and the shape of the book reflects it: unlike the previous two installments, the ending does not hinge on a monumental choice by our eponymous hero; in fact, Shikanoko hardly appears at all, compared to his near-constant presence in the first two. I enjoyed this shift from the older to the younger characters; the flat male characters in authority during installments I & II interested me less than the younger crowd does.

Spoilers For Books I-II in the next 2 paragraphs!

In the first two books, Hina lived as a neglected stepdaughter who was then captured and raised by her fatherā€™s mortal enemy in another town. All these years, she admired the Deerā€™s Child (Shikanoko) from afar. But the death of the Autumn Princess at the end of book II leaves Hina in charge of Shikaā€™s infant sonā€”and she only twelve years old herself. In book III, she hides among the courtesans of Lake Kasumiā€™s pleasure boats and works for them as she comes of age and watches Shikaā€™s son grow up. Along the way, she meets the true emperor for the first time.

Meanwhile, in the Darkwood, Shikaā€™s Spider Tribe sons grow in emotional maturity and demonic magic. Like Hina, they learn of love and lust; but unlike the powerless Hina, each of the sons finds his own place in the power hierarchy of the family, and the most powerful among them shape the empire far beyond the Darkwood, inheriting the power structure left by the deaths during of the first two books. Ultimately, they aim to spin a trap for Shikanoko, the father who sent them away at the end of book II, as he hides in the Darkwood, unaware and still lost in grief for the death of his beloved Autumn Princess, now over a decade before.

Overall :

Even though Lord of the Darkwood feels very much like an installment (instead of a novel), I enjoyed it as much as I enjoyed the previous two. The younger characters present a wide array of hopeful heroines and terrifying monsters, and their journeys more than make for an interesting story. With Hearn’s characteristically spare, but perfect prose, she has drawn an even more immersive and adult fantasy world than her famed Tales of the Otori series.

****4/5 STARS

Lord of the Darkwood is adult fantasy written by Lian Hearn and was published August 9th 2016 by Fsg Originals. Paperback, 224 pages.Ā Thank you to Lian Hearn, FSG Originals and Netgalley for my review copy!Ā The opinions I share are completely my own and in no way compensated for by publishers or authors.

Comments
  1. Bookstooge says:

    Glad to hear this. I should be getting around to this book in a couple of weeks…

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I’m loving the sound of this series! The more I read about it on here, the more I’m convinced I have to give this one a try some day. The setting is really compelling, especially since I’m always drawn to books inspired by East Asian cultures. The installment effect you mentioned is something I’ve noticed in a couple other serial novels too, could it be a common symptom of this format?

    Liked by 1 person

    • Christy Luis says:

      It’s really good! I think you’ll find it a refreshing šŸ˜€ The “installment” feeling seems to derive from splitting up the natural story arc into four separate arcs; three seems to work more naturally.

      Like

  3. Heroines, monsters and amazing covers… This series does indeed look more promising with each of your new reviews I read! šŸ™‚

    Liked by 1 person

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