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Turning the Storm (2003)

por Naomi Kritzer

Otros autores: Ver la sección otros autores.

Series: Eliana's Song (2)

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
1626168,796 (3.74)21
A powerful new voice in fantasy fiction, the acclaimed author of Fires of the Faithful continues her enthralling epic of persecution and war, passion and triumph, and of the brave young woman who must succeed in... Turning the Storm She is called musician, rebel, soldier, legend. After months of leading an uprising against the treacherous religious order of the Fedeli and the ruling Circle of Mages, young Eliana is known throughout the land. Striking from the blighted wastelands, her army of reformers has grown in number--adding liberated slaves to its ranks. Driven by their beliefs in the Old Way, Eliana and the soldiers of the Lupi stand on faith alone. But faith won’t save the Lupi from traitors in their midst--or from the magical fires of the mages. Seeing her soldiers reduced to ashes around her, Eliana takes a desperate gamble: she steps down from command. Then, armed with stolen orders to attend one of the musical ensembles within the Imperial enclave, she disguises herself as a boy, takes up her violin, and heads straight into enemy territory. And now the girl-turned-general adds another title to her rank: spy.… (más)
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Mostrando 1-5 de 6 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
My opinion on Turning the storm is sort of similar to that of Fires of the faithful. It has a great heroine, it passes the Bechdel test, and it has a nice story. I did find myself drifting away on occasion. I'm not sure if I can describe what it was, but I was a bit impatient with it at times. I think it would have benefited from a bit more depth regarding the characters. It pains me a little to say it, since I did like the characters. But with the novelty of the story wearing off a bit, I guess I started noticing a certain simplicity in the description of the characters and a bit in the story itself as well. That doesn't mean it wasn't pleasant to read, it was. And if I'm correct this is only the second book of this author, so I have high hopes for her. She had good ideas: I like the male/female equality, I like the way the main characters, Eliana, slowly figures out she likes women and the understated way in which this is described, and I like how she mixes the ideological with the practical when it comes to religion. This is the only fantasy book I can remember that shows a christian-like religion in a positive light, which is already interesting by itself. Of course, the differences she has incorporated (the most important one God being female) are interesting to see as well. What I really like is that a few of the main characters only vaguely believe in either religion, despite the fact that one of their friends is a fervent believer, and that both religions are corrupted at some point by people lusting for power. Even though the fighting parties are mostly divided by religion, it shows people of either religion fighting on both sides, it shows that there are good people and bad people on both sides, and in the end, it shows that neither side is impervious to corruption.

All in all, I would give this book 3.5 stars, because I think the execution could be improved, but given the subject matters, and the original ideas the author incorporates in her book, I'm rounding it of to four. ( )
  zjakkelien | Jan 2, 2024 |
This is the second book in Eliana’s Song, which is really more like a single book divided into two than a series. The first book is Fires of the Faithful. Having said that, this review will contain spoilers for Fires of the Faithful, so beware.

When the last book left off, Eliana had led a rebellion of prisoners at a forced labor camp, and her new army was working to overthrow the tyrannical government and the magician’s Circle, which had blighted the land. The majority of the rebels were believers of the Old Way, an outlawed religion.

In Turning the Storm, Eliana goes undercover as a spy in the capital city, which may not make complete since but isn’t surprising. The missing love interest, Mira, was dragged off to capital, and the two had to reunite at some point.

However, Mira is just not a very interesting character. Maybe I’m forgetting what she was like in the first book, but in Turning the Storm, she has almost no page time. She’s not developed. How am I supposed to care about the love interest when she’s hardly even in the book?

Turning the Storm also suffered from some dragging sections, mainly the “Eliana as a spy” episode and the last hundred pages or so. The main plot finishes sooner than I expected, but I can understand why Naomi Kritzer chose to do this. While it may have felt draggy, it did allow her to explore and lead to a conclusion some of the themes she’s been working with, most notably religion. I found the direction that took very interesting, but I won’t give anything away.

One of the best things about the Eliana books has been the treatment of the revolution. Too often, fantasy and science-fiction books tend to paint rebellions in black and white, whereas Turning the Storm did a good job of showing the complexity of the situation.

The solution to some plot problems at the end felt rather forced and bit too convenient, and that led to some of my dissatisfaction with the ending. Don’t get me wrong – it wasn’t a terrible ending or anything, I just was frustrated with some aspects of it, although there were other aspects I really appreciated.

I think the major risk that this two book series runs is covering too many topics in too little page space. While I never found it overwhelming, I think some of these ideas could have been explored more if the books or series were longer. Mira certainly needed more page time, the music magic could have used some more as well, and it would have been nice for some of the ideas about religion to get a bit deeper exploration.

However, on the whole, this is still a series worth reading. The plot and characters are enjoyable, and while I might wish for a greater explanation of some elements, Naomi Kritzer does manage to get you thinking.

Originally posted on The Illustrated Page. ( )
  pwaites | Dec 25, 2014 |
My opinion on Turning the storm is sort of similar to that of Fires of the faithful. It has a great heroine, it passes the Bechdel test, and it has a nice story. I did find myself drifting away on occasion. I'm not sure if I can describe what it was, but I was a bit impatient with it at times. I think it would have benefited from a bit more depth regarding the characters. It pains me a little to say it, since I did like the characters. But with the novelty of the story wearing off a bit, I guess I started noticing a certain simplicity in the description of the characters and a bit in the story itself as well. That doesn't mean it wasn't pleasant to read, it was. And if I'm correct this is only the second book of this author, so I have high hopes for her. She had good ideas: I like the male/female equality, I like the way the main characters, Eliana, slowly figures out she likes women and the understated way in which this is described, and I like how she mixes the ideological with the practical when it comes to religion. This is the only fantasy book I can remember that shows a christian-like religion in a positive light, which is already interesting by itself. Of course, the differences she has incorporated (the most important one God being female) are interesting to see as well. What I really like is that a few of the main characters only vaguely believe in either religion, despite the fact that one of their friends is a fervent believer, and that both religions are corrupted at some point by people lusting for power. Even though the fighting parties are mostly divided by religion, it shows people of either religion fighting on both sides, it shows that there are good people and bad people on both sides, and in the end, it shows that neither side is impervious to corruption.

All in all, I would give this book 3.5 stars, because I think the execution could be improved, but given the subject matters, and the original ideas the author incorporates in her book, I'm rounding it of to four. ( )
1 vota zjakkelien | Jun 30, 2014 |
This book has been on my tbr shelf for 2 years, I was waiting for 'fires of the faithful' to come up somewhere [ebay/2nd hand] it was quite a hard find, as soon as I got hold of a copy, there was nothing left to do but read it. If the first book was an unexpected surprise, this one by far surpassed it in my love. A great fantasy in a small book, not too confusing, a few big plot teasers and twists but nothing that will outfox you. A great series to get you hooked on fantasy forever! ( )
1 vota viciouslittlething | Dec 2, 2008 |
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Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
Naomi Kritzerautor principaltodas las edicionescalculado
Accornero, FrancoArtista de Cubiertaautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado

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A powerful new voice in fantasy fiction, the acclaimed author of Fires of the Faithful continues her enthralling epic of persecution and war, passion and triumph, and of the brave young woman who must succeed in... Turning the Storm She is called musician, rebel, soldier, legend. After months of leading an uprising against the treacherous religious order of the Fedeli and the ruling Circle of Mages, young Eliana is known throughout the land. Striking from the blighted wastelands, her army of reformers has grown in number--adding liberated slaves to its ranks. Driven by their beliefs in the Old Way, Eliana and the soldiers of the Lupi stand on faith alone. But faith won’t save the Lupi from traitors in their midst--or from the magical fires of the mages. Seeing her soldiers reduced to ashes around her, Eliana takes a desperate gamble: she steps down from command. Then, armed with stolen orders to attend one of the musical ensembles within the Imperial enclave, she disguises herself as a boy, takes up her violin, and heads straight into enemy territory. And now the girl-turned-general adds another title to her rank: spy.

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