This is a series I got into a few decades ago as a preteen, finding The Shattered Sphere (collecting vols. 7-9) at a "fill a bag for a buck" library book sale. I read the shit out of that book, in media res and with none of the rest of the series. Fantasy books were slim pickins at ol' Dalend Memorial (though that's also where I discovered Marion Zimmer Bradley's feminist reimaginings of Arthurian legend and the Iliad). After college with Amazon suddenly a thing, I sought out used copies of all the rest after buying First Blood, which collects volumes 1&2. Never found #3 until I recently thought to look again and now I have them all, as far as I know. These are anthology, sharing a setting and characters, each story by another of a group of authors that passed them between each other, including such writers as Diane Duane, CJ Cherryh, Marion Zimmer Bradley, Poul Anderson, &&&
So here's the breakdown by story:
"Sentences of Death": a young scribe with a traumatic past gets some payback with the help of a magic scroll and Enas Yorl, a magician cursed to constantly shift form. Some clever machinations. 4/5*
"The Face of Chaos": A fortuneteller who's already having a bad day has to save a woman from being sacrificed to consecrate a temple to the gods of the conquerors. I remember in my young New-Agey days being a fan of Illyra. 4/5* mostly because Lynn Abbey's writing is so good.
"The Gate of the Flying Knives": a womanizing bard and his barbarian friend have to go into a magic scroll into a parallel dimension to rescue the bard's lady love, whom he dumps when she starts to get serious about him. 🙄 3/4*
"Shadowspawn": The titular thief gets involved in a plot to embarrass the prince governor, double-crosses the double-crossers, and Prince Kittycat reveals himself to be more sly than everyone assumes. Hanse/Shadowspawn is always a good time. 4/5
"The Price of Doing Business": a crime lord gets ambushed by vengeful street children and then debates morality with the guard who saves him. BTW, I never figured out how to pronounce "krrf." Kerf? Kriff? 4/5*
"Blood Brothers": A drug dealer with a double life gets caught up in a power struggle between wizards and triggers his own curse. 4/5*
"Myrtis": a madame uses all the resources at her disposal to convince the prince's guard to scuttle the plan to clean up the red light district. 5/5*
"Secret of the Blue Star": I forgot Lythande is secretly a woman! (Spoilers?) Leave it to Marion Zimmer Bradley. 5/5*
"Spiders of the Purple Mage": A poor midwife goes on an adventure with a priest to infiltrate a sinister mage's compound of elaborate traps. Fun times. 4/5*
"Goddess": a man infiltrates a temple to Dyareela hidden beneath a temple to the goddess Heqt to wreak revenge upon whoever convinced his sister to kill her unborn child and herself. 3/5*
"The Fruit of Enlibar": The half-brother of the fortune-teller from "The Face of Chaos" rolls in to town to ask her to scry the origin of a shard of pottery that holds the secret to the lost formula for a super powerful steel. Got more backstory on Illyra and Walegrin. 4/5*
"The Dream of the Sorceress": A healer gets caught up in the affairs (literally) of the gods, then gets cock-blocked. But he did get to screw a goddess first so don't feel too sorry for him. 3/5 *
"Vashanka's Minion": Meet Tempus Thales - cursed, ageless, immortal, heals really fast, can't get it up unless the woman's really not into it, and henpecked by his war god who then opens a weapons shop with really, really bad bargains. 3/5*
"To Guard the Guardians": Nasty ol' Tempus Thales gets his just deserts for being a nasty piece of work. Too bad I know it's temporary. 4/5*
"Lady of the Winds": Cappen Varra has to use all his wits and wiles to convince a local wind goddess to spare the caravan he's traveling with and the village they've stopped at. He's such a charming, tricksy fellow. 4/5*
"The Lighter Side of Sanctuary": A tourist brochure for Sanctuary, oof. 5/5*
And that's it! I didn't do the math but I think it shakes out to 4/5* for the collection. I'll move on to volume 3, Shadows of Sanctuary, once I burn through my Hoopla limit (which I forgot about!)