A new story set in the world of “The Red Mother.” Hacksilver riddled with a dragon, saved his family's farm, and won the secret to raise his dead. Nothing prepared him, though, for the long cold winter when the dead walked...and his family came back!
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Hacksilver beat a dragon at riddles and was asked to culture an egg on the dragon's behalf. When the egg hatches, he finds that life has certainly become more interesting.
An interesting story, which, while lacking the Tolkien tributes of its predecessor, makes up for it by being quite stylish and cinematic.
This sequel to The Red Mother, complete with consequences, comes back to haunt Hacksilver, warrior and witch, who dared to befriend a dragon. He is the guardian of that dragon egg, mother and uncle to a dragon youngling, along uncle to missing humans. Life and death stalk Hacksilver in the form of countless spawned young and the walking dead. No one seems to understand, other than his presence complicates a home, a small community, even if he’s the only one who can save it.
Preconceived prejudice was felt keenly in all its pain, but there was also friendship and family loyalty. The characters were complicated in a mixture of all three; as they worked together, coping crisis after magical crisis.
This was another rich, layered read offered by Elizabeth Bear; offering fantasy, drama, heart, and thought, peppered by moments of humor rising naturally from the circumstances. If you enjoyed The Red Mother, don’t miss this book.
This was a nice little follow up to The Red Mother, expanding on that story and going in some interesting directions. I thought it was an interesting mix of dark but also funny. The phrase "animated people jerky" is a new classic for me.
After successfully getting a dragon's magic, a 'witch' sets about resurrecting the family's dead children. What was not expected are 'side effects' of the magic, which would manifest a few days later and involve taking care of a baby dragon and dealing with others that are also newly born.
Picked this up without realising it’s a sequel. But it works, kind of - Hacksilver sets about raising the dead and bringing life. Magic is sketched out briefly; the focus is on Hacksilver’s narrative voice, which is entertaining enough to keep the story going.
A last-minute quick read to finish out my challenge. I enjoyed it; the events of this story follow directly on from Red Mother, and both are an interesting and entertaining take on Viking-Age tales/sagas/eddas. I hope Bear writes more in this setting.
Yes, please; please continue to write as many of these stories as possible. Thank you for asking! (Also, I do realize I included the word "please" twice. It's for a reason.)