silverflight8: bee on rose  (Bee)
[personal profile] silverflight8
So this review is jumping the queue, because I love it. Sorry, all-other-allegedly-superior-books and books waiting in the review-queue, I play favourites. [I swear I'll get to Till We Have Faces, Freakonomics, Spindle's End...]

I inhaled the six books of Garth Nix's The Seventh Tower series--The Fall, Castle, Aenir, Above the Veil, Into Battle and The Violet Keystone--in the last two days. This is not a feat because they're tiny little books published by Scholastic, and two hundred large-print pages apiece, and also I've read them before. For the past few months, I've just had the most intense craving for this series and put it off because I was busy, or out of country, but then I got my hands on them and yes, they are still delightful.

I love Garth Nix for how he treats pat ideas in fantasy. The Seventh Tower takes place in a world living under the Veil, a thick layer that prevents sunlight from reaching the ground. In this world, light is of paramount importance. The people who live in the seven towers are almost all Light mages of some sort or another, and are divided into seven orders--from Red up to Violet. Within these colours there are further class divisions, with Violet Shadowlords at the top and Red Dimmers at the bottom. Light, channeled through Sunstones, is made into powerful weapons and tools; using a powerful enough Sunstone, a user can make solid stairways and floors out of light, play a symphony on specially-constructed crystal, or fire off destructive rays. Again, the colour of the light plays a role--generally, Violet is most powerful, but there are also specific colours for specific purposes (Green ray of healing, Red ray of destruction.) Colour and light also signify all sorts of other things; instead of bowing, you give light from your Sunstones, and judging of events is coded by the colour you flash (Yellow ray of failed ambition, Violet of Attainment, White ray of disgust, etc.) People can only use colours in their own level or below; a Green man might use any colour from Red to Green, but not Blue and above.

This seven-way split in class divisions and power is so easy to make artificially perfect--cut-and-dry fantasy, colour-by-numbers fantasy. But like his standalone novel Ragwitch, which deals with the four Elements (an overused motif) both novels are done in a very original way.

For one, the protagonist, Tal, is never really 'in' the social construct of the Seven Towers. He's a boy of the Orange order on the verge of adolescence/adulthood, but his father's disappearance, mother's sickness and familial indifference force him to do desperate (and illegal) acts to try to save his family. In trying to obtain a Primary Sunstone, he falls off the Red Tower and into a society entirely alien to him--Icecarls, the people who live on the ice that covers the world. The series deals a lot with culture clash; Milla, the first Icecarl he meets and his companion in his adventures, is practically Tal's opposite in every way. The simple existence of people outside the Towers is itself shocking to Tal, and the Icecarls have their own brand of magic. Aenir is the spirit world above the Veil, where Sunstones and Spiritshadows (familiars made of shadow) are gathered; this world is like a fantastical version of Earth-with-sunshine, and is a third culture which is totally different from Tal's normal existence.

The supporting cast doesn't quite fall into the nice seven-towers, seven-colours mold either. Tal's parents are out of the picture, so he goes for help to his great-uncle Ebbitt, one of my favourite characters. Ebbitt was once a Indigo Brightblinder but fell all the way down to Red Dimmer, but he's clearly extremely clever. What makes him fun is that he is intermittently absent-minded and mad, completely lost on his own (fascinating yet irrelevant) train of thought. He's also very funny, and provides some of the comic relief in addition to his more standard mentor role. The Spiritshadow that Tal acquires isn't standard, either; he fails to bind it, and the two are more in a mutual partnership than anything else.

Personally I think the fact that these novels don't have an active massive fandom is a crying shame, because I love the worldbuilding so, so, so much. The world of Tal and Milla and Aenir and the Towers are a huge part of what I think of as my favourite type of fantasy. It takes ideas from real life (seven colour spectrum) and transforms it into a world predicated on those ideas--which is then turned upside down and torn apart, like all good novels. With this tenuous connection to the real world, Nix avoids a lot of horrendous weighty info-dumping, which is the bane of my existence when it comes to reading secondary-world fantasy. It's a lot like The Phantom Tollbooth, I think. Certainly the whimsy of The Phantom Tollbooth isn't the same, but there's a certain humour and wryness that is equally charming in all the books. As well, though there are sort of rules about magic, Tal goes off the beaten track quickly, and Nix doesn't overdescribe everything (that tends to take the magic out of it.) Instead, the reader gets to see things from the side instead of head-on--Tal thinks about his life in the Tower, and the things he's seen others do, but he's preoccupied with everything else and the magic remains tantalizingly hinted at.

If you can get your hands on this series, do! They're tiny; you'll finish them in no time. And the world they make is fantastic.
Depth: 1

Date: May. 21st, 2013 07:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bluegerl.livejournal.com
Sounds like a must get for me!!!!! Amazon? or kindle? must check, and thanks for the review.
Depth: 2

Date: May. 21st, 2013 05:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silverflight8.livejournal.com
I hope you like them! I feel like I'm in love :)
Depth: 1

Date: May. 21st, 2013 05:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kmo-lj.livejournal.com
i will keep a lookout. i really enjoyed the Abhorsen series, so i'd be interested in checking out Nix's other work. He's a fabulous storyteller.
Depth: 2

Date: May. 21st, 2013 06:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silverflight8.livejournal.com
I think I've read the exact opposite--I've never actually read Abhorsen series (they're on hold now) but I've read his other stuff. I hope you can get a copy! I wish they came in omnibus editions; there's six books, but they're all titchy so there wouldn't even be an issue with spines like you get with encyclopaedic works! :D

OK now looking at his bibliography, it says he wrote a space opera novel in 2012! Oh god, want.
Depth: 3

Date: May. 21st, 2013 06:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kmo-lj.livejournal.com
Abhorsen has wonderful world-building and rich female characters. also well-crafted romance that doesn't feel like cheesy YA. it's been awhile since i read them, but i highly recommend, especially to a fan of the Kushielverse.

actually my go to rec for Kushiel fans is actually the Queen's Thief series by Megan Whelan Turner- are you familiar with those? Set in a vaguely Byzantine world, they deal a lot with mythology and the gods interfering with mortal affairs.
Depth: 4

Date: May. 21st, 2013 06:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silverflight8.livejournal.com
Yeah, I noticed on this read through that although I read it when I was a teen (maybe fourteen or fifteen?) it's by no means only for that age range. And I'm so glad. I hate it when you re-read or revisit old things and find that it was just nostalgia covering up :(

I've heard of them, but never picked them up. But if it's vaguely historical-period influenced, then I am so there. *runs off to library site again*
Depth: 5

Date: May. 21st, 2013 06:24 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kmo-lj.livejournal.com
oh you should totally check out Queen's Thief. the first book (which i think won the Newberry) does feel more like traditional YA, but you do kind of have to read it to understand the story. the next books in the series are so very adult, though, honestly one of the most loving and heartbreaking romances i have ever read in any series. and it's really refreshing to read a historical fantasy series set in someplace other than Western Europe, IMO.
Depth: 6

Date: May. 22nd, 2013 01:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silverflight8.livejournal.com
On hold now, so hopefully it'll come in soon! :D I look forward to reading :)
Depth: 1

Date: May. 24th, 2013 08:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dhampyresa.livejournal.com
I think I read the first two of those way back in highschool. They were pretty rad, thanks for reminding me of them. I'll see if I can find them.
Depth: 2

Date: May. 24th, 2013 09:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silverflight8.livejournal.com
They're wonderful! I hope you can get a copy somewhere.
Depth: 1

Date: Jun. 1st, 2013 02:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sherrilina.livejournal.com
Oh man I remember seeing excerpts/ads for these books in the backs of my Animorphs books sometimes, lol! Never read them though, interesting to hear you loved them so much. You should definitely read the Abhorsen trilogy (really gripping and exciting--I have fond memories of listening to them all on tape), and also have you read Shade's Children </ em> by him? It's sci-fi rather than fantasy, and really creepy but interesting.
Depth: 2

Date: Jun. 1st, 2013 02:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silverflight8.livejournal.com
You should totally read these books! *another attempt to lure people*

I have Sabriel on my desk right now! I am sooooo behind on reviewing everything, and I've got so many books to read...w;iovxn;oewio

No, I've never even heard of those books! Huh. I will put that on my ever-increasing list of books to find.
Depth: 3

Date: Jun. 1st, 2013 02:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sherrilina.livejournal.com
Lol, I can barely read a lot of books in a year, let alone review them all! :p So I take my hat off to you...(I tend to only write in my LJ about ones I have strong fandomy feelings about). And no, Shade's Children is just a one-off book, not a series...
Depth: 4

Date: Jun. 1st, 2013 03:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] silverflight8.livejournal.com
I used to be better about this! Then life intruded and also I started reading a metric ton of fic, and I don't review fic publicly. It just feels...not right. It's not an unequal field like published authors and critics, it's like we're in the same space (and also same roles) so it felt awkward...

Oh hey, it's an ebook from the library! That's convenient :D

Edit: okay so I checked it out and omg take a look at the cover, it's hideous!
Image (http://ic.pics.livejournal.com/silverflight8/21883370/70772/70772_original.png)
Edited Date: Jun. 1st, 2013 03:08 am (UTC)

Profile

silverflight8: bee on rose  (Default)
silver

December 2025

S M T W T F S
 123456
789101112 13
14151617181920
21222324252627
282930 31   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 9th, 2026 08:59 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios