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Outremer - US #3

Die Kreuzfahrer 03. Der Zug durch die Wüste.

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Die deutschsprachige Ausgabe der Kreuzfahrer-Serie schreitet zügig voran: Nach Die Tochter des Königs und Der Kreis des Verderbens sind wir mit dem vorliegenden Band bei der Hälfte angekommen. Vorab gleich eine Bitte an alle Freunde spannender, durchdachter Fantasy: Lassen Sie sich nicht von den lieblosen Titelbildern dieser Taschenbücher abschrecken! Chaz Brenchley verfügt in einem Finger über mehr Talent als 90 Prozent seiner Kolleginnen und Kollegen in einer Hand. Es wäre ein Jammer, würde er im Einheitsbrei der Verlagsmassenproduktion untergehen.

Lady Julianne ist vor einer politisch motivierten Ehe aus der Festung Roq de Rançon geflohen und hat sich einem Pilgerzug angeschlossen. Begleitet wird sie dabei -- oder ist es umgekehrt? -- von Männern und Frauen, die nicht bunter zusammgewürfelt sein könnten: die junge, dickköpfige Elisande und ihr verhasster Vater; der von den Erlöser-Rittern misshandelte Edmond und der Knappe Marron, der ein Halbwesen in sich trägt, das ihm das Tor in andere Dimensionen öffnen kann. Ob dies ein Segen oder ein Fluch ist, lässt sich nur schwer sagen. Ihr Ziel ist die verborgene Stadt Rhabat bei den Toten Gewässern.

Brenchley erzählt keineswegs locker und flockig. Seine Stimme wird im Laufe der Geschichte immer älter und brüchiger, als würde er mit seinen Figuren an Wassermangel leiden. Gebannt folgen wir der Spur der Kamele, immer wieder hin und her gerissen zwischen unserem Schulwissen über die Kreuzzüge -- die den Hintergrund dieser Serie bilden -- und den magischen Abwegen, auf die der Autor uns führt. Das Erzähltempo entspricht dem langsamen, stetigen Vorankommen des Pilgerzugs, und erst nach der letzten Seite schrecken wir auf und kehren in die wirkliche Welt zurück -- um möglichst bald wieder in Band vier (Der Schatten des Königs) hinein entfliehen zu können. --Felix Darwin

349 pages, Paperback

First published June 1, 2002

51 people want to read

About the author

Chaz Brenchley

119 books81 followers
Chaz Brenchley has been making a living as a writer since he was eighteen. He is the author of nine thrillers, most recently Shelter, and two major fantasy series: The Books of Outremer, based on the world of the Crusades, and Selling Water by the River, set in an alternate Ottoman Istanbul. A winner of the British Fantasy Award, he has also published three books for children and more than 500 short stories in various genres. His time as Crimewriter-in-Residence at the St Peter's Riverside Sculpture Project in Sunderland resulted in the collection Blood Waters. He is a prizewinning ex-poet, and has been writer in residence at the University of Northumbria, as well as tutoring their MA in Creative Writing. His novel Dead of Light is currently in development with an independent film company; Shelter has been optioned by Granada TV. He was Northern Writer of the Year 2000, and lives in Newcastle upon Tyne with a quantum cat and a famous teddy bear.

Also known as author Daniel Fox.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for K.J. Charles.
Author 69 books12.6k followers
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October 18, 2023
Book 3 of six, or 1.5 of three, depending how you look at it. I'm not a million per cent behind the decision to split what feels very like a trilogy into six, in that the .5 books don't feel entirely concluded, but they are long books and there's nothing wrong with serial publishing if you know that's what you're getting into. The story is compelling and the characters terrific in a bleak sort of way and I love the alt-Crusaders states setting, plus the Wizard's Tower covers are just beautiful: there's a publisher on top of the covers game.
Profile Image for Jules Jones.
Author 26 books49 followers
July 14, 2012
It's the first half of the trilogy's middle volume, and it's travelogue time. This is the section where many trilogies sag, but Brenchley paints a vivid picture of desert travel and its hardships and occasional delights. There's also another display of how very different this series is from standard fantasy derived from Northern European mythology, with the world of the djinn beautifully evoked.[return][return]This volume gets the party from the Roc, where they met, to the place in the desert where they get to meet another major character, with some interesting diversions and scenery along the way. At the outset the party consists of Marron, Julianne and Elisande; Rudel and Redmond, the two Surayonese men; and Jemel, the young Sharai man introduced in volume 1 and briefly encountered in volume 2. The party have conflicting interests, not least because Marron and Elisande were involved in the death of Jemel's lover during the battle in the Roc, but they also have common interests and a common destination. That should be enough to keep the party together, but they aren't the only one with an interest in the supernatural burden Marron carries.[return][return]That burden, the almost-living weapon known as the Daughter, showed the first of its secrets at the end of the previous volume; in the trek across the desert we learn more of what it can do and what it does to its host, and a little of what it actually is. Marron isn't the person anyone would have chosen to carry it, but proves equal to the task.[return][return]And again there are hints of various romantic interests and entanglements, without it being at all obvious how these will eventually be resolved. This segment of the story concludes with another twist of one of the romantic plotlines initiated in the first volume, enticing the reader to read on.[return][return]This volume introduces more characters and adds new plot threads without concluding earlier ones, but it does expand on hints dropped in the earlier volumes, adding more depth to the world and the main characters. With the original book being split into two for the US edition, it should be seen as a segment in a long novel rather than a novel in its own right, and in that context offers enough to make for a satisfying read while still leaving the reader wanting to move on to the next volume.
Profile Image for Viridian5.
945 reviews12 followers
September 5, 2023
After reading Tower of the King's Daughter and A Dark Way to Glory, I won't be following Chaz Brenchley's Books of Outremer series any further. I can't stand these people any longer. They're petty and ineffectual. Give them a choice of an easy and sensible way or a hard way that will lead to them undercutting or betraying someone they care for, and they'll take the second one almost every time. Their plans constantly fail, and I as a reader get annoyed listening to them worrying about the current plan when the odds are good it'll fail too and they'll be back where they started. Characters fall in love in ways I don't believe then spend a lot of book time thinking treacly thoughts about said loved one, who in almost every case has no idea of the attraction. Redmond seems cool but since he rarely complains despite having so much reason to the books don't spend much time on him.

A Dark Way to Glory annoyed me even more, in that it's like a long, boring, unpleasant road trip spent with people you dislike who keep whining and snapping at each other. Will the readers be able to bear the oh-so-exciting walking or camel-riding scenes? Will our leads be taken in by something the reader quickly sees coming? Of course, they will. This book felt like 25% interesting things happening and 75% describing how difficult and unpleasant desert travel is. I got the point.

Lastly, so many authors have taken the path of strongly basing fantasy environments on real world countries and historical situations recently, and it's come to annoy me and feel like they're cheating at world building.
Profile Image for Liviu.
2,560 reviews714 followers
December 18, 2008

Still a page turner but a typical middle book in a trilogy going from here to there so to speak. I am reading book 4/6 and plan to read 5 and 6 also when I get them.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews