Saturday, December 12, 2020

Riders of the Winds

 

By Jack L. Chalker

Book Two of the Changewinds series finds the two main characters, Sam and Charley once again in peril and separated. Sam gets found by a winged man and Charley and Boday get captured by raiders and sold off at a slave market. All three women's minds are tampered with using magic and potions, Charley and Boday to be obedient slaves and poor Sam's memory is completely removed and she is brainwashed into believing that being a field hand is a wonderful to life for her.

Eventually Charley and Boday are liberated by Dorion, a third rank sorcerer who is working for the wizard Boolean. The two women are still somewhat controlled by the enslavement magic but at least they are once again on the road to Boolean, facing the adversaries sent against them by Klittichorn, the horned sorcerer. 

Sam is also liberated from her enslavement, although she is so brainwashed she was happy to be a slave. She is rescued by a Navigator, Crim and his alter ego Kira, both of whom were sent by Boolean. 

In the process of their travels, all three women undergo changes. Charley and Boday lose their distinctive body art and tattoos. Charley goes completely blind and acquires a seeing eye cat, Shadowcat. Sam, due to the labor demanded of a field hand, becomes physically fit but remains fat because of the curse put on her in the first book. After all she has gone through, Sam begins to gain confidence in herself and her ability to survive.

The lands the characters travel through are part of a vast confluence of worlds. The author explains it thus: 

 Akahlar intersects with thousands of worlds, but the only common points are the hubs, the points of greatest force and power. The rest are compressed around the hubs and only intersect at certain random intervals. But when they do touch, they are worlds touching round worlds—so that the actual point of overlap is very narrow.

A shadow man also lays out the goals and possible consequences of Klittichorn and his ally the Storm Princess to Sam after she has been freed from her life of hard labor:

"She [the Storm Princess] and all her armies cannot overthrow the Akhbreed sorcerers in their hub citadels or hope to match the great armies of the rulers. She needs the power of true sorcery behind her, and that Klittichorn brings. He has convinced her that he shares her dream, but he does not. For if the power of the Akhbreed sorcerers is somehow halted, and if the Akhbreed themselves are destroyed, there will be no controls. Instead of all hating the Akhbreed, the thousands of races will begin to suspect and hate and then war with one another. And out of this chaos will come the only remaining, untouchable source of great power, which will be Klittichorn. This he believes, but he, too, is wrong. To destroy the Akhbreed and their sorcerers he must loose the terrible changewinds themselves, the only things against which no Akhbreed sorcerer has power. He will loose them by the score and the Storm Princess will guide them."

"Is that—possible?"

"Kittichorn thinks so. She thinks so. He has somehow managed to summon many small changewinds to the places he commands, although how this is done is a mystery, and she has managed to shape and turn them. But those were small, and one at a time. To control great ones, all at once, and all over Akahlar—that is something reason says cannot be done. Reason and experience also tell that such an event, done all at once, would create such an instability that the worlds themselves would collapse upon each other, that the changewinds would roam unchecked and over vast areas, and none would be safe. Such weight alone might draw all of creation down to the Seat of Probability and to oblivion. All that has ever existed, all that exists, and all that can or will exist will be no longer."

 

 War of the Maelstrom is the next book in the series. I liked Riders of the Winds more than I did the first one, which gives me hope that the third book will be worth reading.



 

No comments: