attackfish (
attackfish) wrote2010-06-10 12:35 pm
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The Boy Hero all Grown up: A Conspiracy of Kings by Megan Whalen Turner
The thing I hate about my favorite authors is that it always feels like it takes them forever to get a book out. I swear to God, it’s not just my imagination that Magan Whalen Turner takes longer than most. She’s also just about my favorite. Fate, I think.
With Hamiathes’ Gift destroyed, the king of Sounis has settled for marriage to a cousin of the queen of Eddis instead of the queen herself. Suddenly, the king’s nephew, Sophos, finds himself in the precarious position of waiting for the birth of the child who would make him no longer the heir to the throne. But as the king’s barons ferment rebellion, Sophos is still a valuable political pawn, and soon with the help of a false friend, the barons kill the unsuspecting Sophos’ family and kidnap him to make him a puppet king. Now he must win his way free to seak the aid his friend, Eugenides, now king of Attolia, and to the queen of Eddis, his beloved Helen. And if he can do all that, he must then win back his throne and learn how to be a king.
I believe I may have mentioned in my previous reviews of the other books in the Queen’s Thief series, that these are the books that I hope have made the biggest impact on my writing. This is probably a futile hope, but still.
It’s not just that Turner’s writing and characterization are superb; it’s that her novels focus on everything I want to focus on in mine. They’re so rife with political intrigue that there’s almost no room for anything else. The four main characters of A Conspiracy of Kings are all monarchs, and Turner explores exactly what that means. In The Thief, Gen and Sophos aren’t the rulers of anything yet. Gen isn’t even the heir to anything, and Sophos is only the heir to the throne because no one else is available. He never expects to actually rule anything. They’re out in the middle of nowhere, and Sophos has no idea Gen’s anything other than a street thief until the very end. When Gen delivers Hamiathes’ Gift and the heir to Sounis in what happens to be a pretty massive political coup, Sophos builds up a picture of the brilliant, smart-mouthed Gen as a sort of older brother/mentor figure. So it’s up to Gen to realize that they’re more than people. They represent their respective countries, and they can never talk to each other just as friends again, that every word they say to each other, or to anyone else, must be examined in that light. But they’re still both human beings and old friends, and Sophos feels betrayed. Turner meshes the personal and the political together so deftly it’s impossible to know where one ends and another begins. And she makes it plain that it’s that intertwined in the character’s reality as well. Gen grieves for the loss of his autonomy as he disappears behind his kingly mask.
Periodically, Turner teases loyal readers with glimpses of the old Gen, hanging out with Sophos in secret, sneaking around his own palace at night, bantering with Irene. These glimpses just make it all the more bitter for the reader as he becomes something he only showed flashes of before, bound by necessity and expedience rather than by choice. Instead of being able to draw Irene out of her shell now that he’s her co-ruler, he’s building the same sort of shell she had been forced to. The first three books in the Queen’s Thief series were about Gen triumphing. A Conspiracy of Kings, on the other hand, is about him subtly losing.
And it’s a worse loss than even that. The old Gen reveals himself most tellingly when he guides Sophos towards accepting his true responsibilities as a monarch and just what those responsibilities are. It would serve his purposes beautifully if instead he were able to keep Sophos as a complete dependent, but he can’t make himself do that. Thus he helps Sophos build his own royal shell, and so, Sophos, a kind, easily embarrassed, somewhat hapless young man, becomes much more like his mentor than he really wanted to.
Each of the books in the Queen’s Thief series has a different point of view, which Turner uses to great effect. In A Conspiracy of Kings, however, Turner doesn’t just stick to one point of view. She switches back and fourth between third person, when Sophos is at the Attolian court, and first person from Sophos’ perspective, telling the story to Helen, when he isn’t. Ordinarily, these sorts of point of view games would annoy me, but Turner makes them work, using the advantages inherent in both. When Sophos is telling the story, at first Turner uses him to provide context, comment on his hero worship of Gen, and to show by example Sophos’ slight pompousness and general uselessness. When she switches to third person, she uses it to reveal emotions Sophos would be too embarrassed to express to Helen, and also to indicate that Sophos is no longer entirely the star of the show. When she switches again to first person, she uses it to show how much Sophos has changed in his time at the Attolian court.
As I said before, Gen’s transformation, even while he’s winning in the political realm, gives A Conspiracy of Kings a decidedly tragic flavor. I’m left desperate to see what happens in the next book, whether the old Gen will emerge again, or will he continue on his current trajectory? Unfortunately, because this is Turner we’re talking about here, I’ll have to wait a few years to find out.
Also, will there be Mede butt kicking? There has to be Mede butt kicking.
What impresses me most about Turner as a writer is that every time I go back to pick apart what makes her books work so well, I end up getting sucked back into the story, and reading them just to read them.
With Hamiathes’ Gift destroyed, the king of Sounis has settled for marriage to a cousin of the queen of Eddis instead of the queen herself. Suddenly, the king’s nephew, Sophos, finds himself in the precarious position of waiting for the birth of the child who would make him no longer the heir to the throne. But as the king’s barons ferment rebellion, Sophos is still a valuable political pawn, and soon with the help of a false friend, the barons kill the unsuspecting Sophos’ family and kidnap him to make him a puppet king. Now he must win his way free to seak the aid his friend, Eugenides, now king of Attolia, and to the queen of Eddis, his beloved Helen. And if he can do all that, he must then win back his throne and learn how to be a king.
I believe I may have mentioned in my previous reviews of the other books in the Queen’s Thief series, that these are the books that I hope have made the biggest impact on my writing. This is probably a futile hope, but still.
It’s not just that Turner’s writing and characterization are superb; it’s that her novels focus on everything I want to focus on in mine. They’re so rife with political intrigue that there’s almost no room for anything else. The four main characters of A Conspiracy of Kings are all monarchs, and Turner explores exactly what that means. In The Thief, Gen and Sophos aren’t the rulers of anything yet. Gen isn’t even the heir to anything, and Sophos is only the heir to the throne because no one else is available. He never expects to actually rule anything. They’re out in the middle of nowhere, and Sophos has no idea Gen’s anything other than a street thief until the very end. When Gen delivers Hamiathes’ Gift and the heir to Sounis in what happens to be a pretty massive political coup, Sophos builds up a picture of the brilliant, smart-mouthed Gen as a sort of older brother/mentor figure. So it’s up to Gen to realize that they’re more than people. They represent their respective countries, and they can never talk to each other just as friends again, that every word they say to each other, or to anyone else, must be examined in that light. But they’re still both human beings and old friends, and Sophos feels betrayed. Turner meshes the personal and the political together so deftly it’s impossible to know where one ends and another begins. And she makes it plain that it’s that intertwined in the character’s reality as well. Gen grieves for the loss of his autonomy as he disappears behind his kingly mask.
Periodically, Turner teases loyal readers with glimpses of the old Gen, hanging out with Sophos in secret, sneaking around his own palace at night, bantering with Irene. These glimpses just make it all the more bitter for the reader as he becomes something he only showed flashes of before, bound by necessity and expedience rather than by choice. Instead of being able to draw Irene out of her shell now that he’s her co-ruler, he’s building the same sort of shell she had been forced to. The first three books in the Queen’s Thief series were about Gen triumphing. A Conspiracy of Kings, on the other hand, is about him subtly losing.
And it’s a worse loss than even that. The old Gen reveals himself most tellingly when he guides Sophos towards accepting his true responsibilities as a monarch and just what those responsibilities are. It would serve his purposes beautifully if instead he were able to keep Sophos as a complete dependent, but he can’t make himself do that. Thus he helps Sophos build his own royal shell, and so, Sophos, a kind, easily embarrassed, somewhat hapless young man, becomes much more like his mentor than he really wanted to.
Each of the books in the Queen’s Thief series has a different point of view, which Turner uses to great effect. In A Conspiracy of Kings, however, Turner doesn’t just stick to one point of view. She switches back and fourth between third person, when Sophos is at the Attolian court, and first person from Sophos’ perspective, telling the story to Helen, when he isn’t. Ordinarily, these sorts of point of view games would annoy me, but Turner makes them work, using the advantages inherent in both. When Sophos is telling the story, at first Turner uses him to provide context, comment on his hero worship of Gen, and to show by example Sophos’ slight pompousness and general uselessness. When she switches to third person, she uses it to reveal emotions Sophos would be too embarrassed to express to Helen, and also to indicate that Sophos is no longer entirely the star of the show. When she switches again to first person, she uses it to show how much Sophos has changed in his time at the Attolian court.
As I said before, Gen’s transformation, even while he’s winning in the political realm, gives A Conspiracy of Kings a decidedly tragic flavor. I’m left desperate to see what happens in the next book, whether the old Gen will emerge again, or will he continue on his current trajectory? Unfortunately, because this is Turner we’re talking about here, I’ll have to wait a few years to find out.
Also, will there be Mede butt kicking? There has to be Mede butt kicking.
What impresses me most about Turner as a writer is that every time I go back to pick apart what makes her books work so well, I end up getting sucked back into the story, and reading them just to read them.
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My Reaction:
*stares*
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH.
I'm not kidding. I agree--soup for all of them! I would make them all some yummy soup if it would help with all their angst.
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