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The Glasswrights' Progress, by Mindy L. Klasky Book Review | SFReader.com
The Glasswrights' Progress, by Mindy L. Klasky Genre: Fantasy Publisher: Roc Published: 2001 Review Posted: 6/11/2013 Reviewer Rating:
Reader Rating: Not Rated
The Glasswrights' Progress, by Mindy L. Klasky
Book Review by Joshua Palmatier
Have you read this book?
The Glasswrights' Progress is the second book in the Glasswright series by Mindy L. Klasky and I finished it this morning. I though the first book, The Glasswrights' Apprentice,
showed some real promise for the character and the world and I was
looking forward to seeing how Rani, the main character, was going to go
about restoring the Glasswrights' Guild that was destroyed in the first
book. That seemed to me to be the obvious plotline for continuing the
series after the way the first book ended.
However, that turns out NOT to be what the second book is about. There
are hints of that storyline here--Rani has that goal--but there isn't
much progress made toward that goal in this book, regardless of the
title. Instead, the book is about how Rani is kidnapped from her life
in the court of the new King Halaravilli, the boy she unwittingly helped
put on the throne, and taken to the northern realm of Amanthia, where
King Sin-Hazar is planning war. Of course, Rani becomes embroiled in
the politics and the mechanics of the preparations for war and ends up
being important in the final outcome. The most shocking aspect of this
war is that King Sin Hazar appears intent on forming an army of
children, training them as if they were men already.
I thought the book was interesting, especially in the way in which the
two kingdoms differ in their idea of a caste system. In the south,
Rani's homeland, the castes are separated by, essentially, the job the
person has, such as Trader or Soldier or Touched. In Amanthia, the
caste is predicted at the time of the person's birth, a tattoo traced on
the person's face signifying whether they are lions, owls, swans, or
suns. The rest of their life is dictated by that tattoo. I also liked
how the Fellowship of Jair--the group that helped Rani reach her new
position in the first book--is used and how its perception shifts in
this book.
That said, I felt this second novel suffered from the rumored "second
novel syndrome." I didn't feel it was as well written as the first, and
I was disappointed that there wasn't more done with the restoration of
the Glasswrights' Guild. Some progress is made in that respect, but it
was more or less tacked on to the end. The new characters introduced
were interesting, but I was still more invested in Rani and her plight
than any of the others. And I felt that the threat of war needed to be .
. . well, more threatening. There were a few good scenes indicating
the stakes, but overall the war itself--the marching northward, the
preparations, and the final confrontation--weren't a significant portion
of the novel. Most of it was Rani's kidnapping, the introduction of
the new characters in Amanthia, and the convergence of their plotlines.
So, in the end I enjoyed the book, but overall it felt like a bridging
novel to the third book. I realize that in order for Rani to make any
progress in restoring her guild that she needed to leave the realm of
Morenia (all things glasswright were destroyed in the previous king's
rage over his son's death), but I would have liked to have seen more
developed along this plotline. I'm moving on to the third book, hoping
for more on the guild.
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