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Today, I'm posting a straightforward book review of a fantasy novel I admire a great deal...
Rhymer by Gregory Frost (Tor Books)
Gregory
Frost’s Rhymer is easily the best thing I’ve read in the past year. It’s
a… and already I’m having trouble finding the right descriptors. Initially, it
looks to be a Celtic fantasy, with Thomas the Rhymer waging a one-man war
against all Faerie. But the elves, it turns out, are an invading alien species
from another dimension, so it’s actually science fiction. Oh, and because Frost
keeps the historical events consistent with those we know, it’s also a secret
history. And the elves themselves are straight out of a horror novel. But it
could also be that it’s actually an alternate history.
Let me
start over again.
Thomas
Lindsay Rimor de Erceldoune is mad, to begin with. Mad and cursed with the gift
of prophecy, he is clearly a precursor to or avatar of Tom O’Bedlam. One night,
the Queen of Faerie comes hunting with her elf-troop and takes True Thomas’s
brother away with her as a sacrifice to the Teind. On a whim, she cures Tom of
his madness (but not his visions, which take the form of epileptic seizures and
prophesies he cannot understand). This, as it turns out, is the biggest mistake
she will ever make.
The
newly-rational protagonist learns of the elven/alien plot to first
reverse-terraform and then take over our planet. Being immortal, they can take
their time. Being shape-shifters, they can assume powerful positions in human
society. To oppose them, Tom must first learn how to use weapons. And before
that, because even a hero must eat, he must learn a trade, that of
stone-cutter.
Everyone
knows the pleasures we expect from an action-adventure novel and Frost delivers
them most ably. But he’s also too canny a writer to give you exactly
what you’re expecting. Through all the many twists and turns of plot, he
carefully avoids those that have grown trite and predictable through overuse. And
though True Thomas is the hero his world needs—experiences he’d much rather have
avoided have made him immortal and given him the elven power of glamour—he’s
also a convincing human being in a world that is recognizably our own. He has
friends and family and loyalties and, in the course of events, a wife.
This wife
is Janet of the green kirtle who, in the Child ballad “Tam Lin” (Thomas has
many names in the course of his long life), saves her own true love from the
Fairy Queen, and she is one of the most engaging aspects of this novel. Not
only is she stalwart and capable enough to rescue Thomas from the darkest night
of his soul but she is convincing as his spouse as well. They two form a
working marriage, a union of peers whose support for each other strengthens them
both. And how often do you see that in a fantasy novel?
There is
so much to praise about Rhymer! All the characters in it ring true. The
stonemasons sound like working class men. (When Thomas’ mentor, Alpin Waldroup,
is asked in what battle he was injured, he replies, “Has it a name? I never
heard it.”) The elves are everything that’s wrong about aristocrats, and then
some. The worldbuilding, both of Faerie
and the Scottish Borders, is exemplary. I could go on and on. Suffice it to say
that Gregory Frost has done the hard work that is the making of a great book
and reimagined everything about it afresh. This is one hell of a satisfying
novel.
Much more
could be said. But I will stop here, before I drown you in a sea of
superlatives.
In the way
of such fantasies, there are two more volumes on their way. Rhymer: Hoode,
in which True Thomas assumes the guise of a certain bow-carrying outlaw,
available now, and a third book, which I understand will be set in Elizabethan
times, will follow soon. As of this writing, I am midway through the second and
avid to read number three.
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