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Firebird Trilogy, by Kathy Tyers Book Review | SFReader.com
Firebird Trilogy, by Kathy Tyers Genre: Fantasy Publisher: Bethany House Publishers Published: 2004 Review Posted: 6/7/2005 Reviewer Rating:
Reader Rating: 8 out of 10
Firebird Trilogy, by Kathy Tyers
Book Review by Sean T.M. Stiennon
Have you read this book?
As the title would imply, Firebird: A Trilogy combines three books that were
originally published in separate volumes as Firebird, Fusion Fire, and Crown
of Fire. This volume, published by the Christian house Bethany books, is a
daunting brick of paper.
It tells the story of Lady Firebird Angelo, a third child of the royal
family, who is condemned to die by laws of her homeworld, Netaia. All third
children, or wastlings, must die once the line of succession is established
to make sure that they don't try to seize power later on. Voluntary death
is the only honorable option open to Firebird.
However, despite her attempts to sacrifice herself in battle against a
neighboring world, she is captured by Federate forces and meets Brennen
Caldwell, a powerful psychic who finds himself strongly attracted to
her-psychics forge a deep link with their spouse when they marry, and
Firebird's mind is perfectly connatural with his. Gradually, Firebird
questions her loyalty to Netaia, her determination to die, and her faith in
the Powers, the deified attributes such as Pride, Excellence, and
Indomitability worshiped by the Netaians. Her trust in her homeworld is
further shaken when she witnesses horrific war crimes being committed
against the world where she is being held. On top of that, she finds
herself falling in love with Brennen Caldwell, and increasingly attracted to
his faith in a mysterious, all-powerful, and all-loving God. Soon, she
becomes an open traitor to her oppressive homeworld by renouncing her death
orders and accepting Federate citizenship. However, trouble still brews on
Netaia, especially after Federate forces occupy it in retaliation for its
unjust invasions of other systems.
The trilogy has four basic plot threads: Firebird's romance with Brennen,
both before and after marriage, conflicts between herself and her homeworld,
her conversion to Brennen's monotheistic faith, and the conflict between the
virtuous Sentinels and the Shuhr, a group of rogue psychics of the same
origin who use their powers for unbridled evil. The first book doesn't have
anything about the Shuhr, and focuses on Netaia, while the second book
focuses on the Shuhr and has relatively little to do with Netaia. The third
book satisfyingly interconnects and resolves both elements.
The other two, romance and religion, pervade all three. I actually enjoyed
the romantic side of it quite a bit-both characters were likeable, and their
relationship was always endearing. It was also nice to see the romance
continuing into marriage and beyond, and not without trial.
The religious aspect of the trilogy was actually the thread which I most
disliked, although I'm an orthodox Catholic-actually, that could be why,
because I disagreed with many of the ideas put forward. Although the books
seem to present the Sentinels as being something like Jews, (exiled from
their homeworld and awaiting a Messiah) the religion itself seemed to be more Protestant
than Jewish-they have two holy books, one older and one newer, they
have similar notions about God, they believe in the Trinity, unlike Jews,
and much more. The religious bits, including Firebird's conversion
experiences, tended to be fairly preachy, although not as bad as those in
some other Christian fiction I've read. Also, the religion struck me as
having a lot of emotion and very little reason. It takes a vision to
convert Firebird, in the end-she can't be swayed by the merits of the faith
itself. At a couple times when the characters are faced with a difficult
decision, a vision clears everything up. That doesn't happen to most
people, even most devout Christians, and one shouldn't rely on miracles to
inspire belief.
That said, Firebird Trilogy is well-written and reasonably entertaining.
The characters are endearing, and the author's use of psychics-their
techniques, their culture, and their failings-was fascinating, particularly
when she shows how the Shuhr differ from their virtuous cousins. The plot
was actually very suspenseful at times, and the villains were suitably
nasty. Even the religious and moral aspects were pleasant when they weren't
preachy.
Overall, I'd recommend Firebird to any Christian or non-Christian reader who
wants to try a fairly well-written-and reasonably interesting-science
fiction book with Christian themes.
***
Sean T. M. Stiennon is currently a staff book reviewer for Deep Magic: The
E-zine of High Fantasy and Science Fiction. His fiction has been published
both online and in print, and his first short story collection, entitled
Six with Flinteye, will be released on July 1, 2005 from Silver Lake
Publishing. Visit his author page at www.sfreader.com/authors/seanstiennon
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