The Spirit Ring

The Spirit Ring is a 1992 historical fantasy by Lois McMaster Bujold, based on Agricola's De re metallica, combined with the folkloric tradition of the grateful dead and the life of Benvenuto Cellini.[1]

The Spirit Ring
First edition
AuthorLois McMaster Bujold
Cover artistStephen Hickman
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreFantasy novel
Publisher(Baen)
Publication date
November 1992
Media typePrint Hardbound & Paperback & E-Book
Pages367 pp (first edition, hardbound)
ISBN0-671-72142-9 (0-671-72188-7 pb)
OCLC26398493
LC ClassPZ7.B91114 Sp 1992

Plot

In the fictional Italian city-state of Montefoglia, Fiametta is the 15-year-old daughter of a master metal-worker and magician, Prospero Beneforte. He indulges her wish to learn to make magical items of metal, though it is not generally viewed as appropriate for her gender.

At the beginning of the story, Fiametta casts a lion's-head ring with a love spell which aims to identify a 'true heart'. The young girl is chagrined when the heart selected by the spell belongs to a young Swiss miner, named Thur Ochs. Thur came to Montefoglia to work as an apprentice to Prospero Beneforte, a position secured by his brother, Uri.

But Uri is killed in the fight when Duke Sandrino is usurped by an ambitious mercenary leader, Lord Ferrante. Ferrante's magician, Vitelli, pickles Uri's body in salt for future use in making a ring of power — the spirit ring of the book's title. Fiametta and her father, who were present to deliver a commissioned work when the fight began, manage to escape but are followed by Ferrante's men. Prospero dies of a heart attack while holding the attackers back to let Fiametta escape, and his body eventually is added to that of Uri as a resource for ring-making.

The story then follows Fiametta, Thur, and the local Abbot as they find out Lord Ferrante's plans and invent ways to block them. The grandest of these is the use of the casting of a larger-than-life bronze Perseus figure, Master Beneforte's masterwork that had only reached the wax model stage before his death, and the voluntary investment in it of the spirit of Uri Ochs. This invincible soldier is able to lead a rabble of townspeople into the castle and kills Lord Ferrante just before it cools to immobility. The Abbot manages to shrive the spirits of the assorted casualties of the concluding battle, Fiametta manages to unmake the ring, and Master Beneforte in spirit form helps end the career of Vitelli.

Reception

Publishers Weekly praised it as "enthralling" and "crisply paced [and] fully developed",[2] while the SF Site called it "Bujold at her storytelling best" and "a fine and stirring yarn".[3]

Infinity Plus stated that it has "[g]ood writing, decent plot, engaging characters, [and] logical, well put-together world", but found it to be "somehow lacking a certain snap that Bujold has consistently brought to her Science Fiction".[4] At Tor.com, Jo Walton noted that she "ought to like [the book] more", emphasizing that it has "wonderful ingredients", that she has "intellectual admiration" for it, and that it would be easy to discuss the book "in a way that really made it sound amazing by dwelling on the things that are amazing", but ultimately concluding that "there's no spark" and that Bujold has "written books that were so much better".[5]

References

  1. Author's note in The Spirit Ring
  2. The Spirit Ring, reviewed at Publishers Weekly; published November 2, 1992; retrieved September 23, 2021
  3. The Spirit Ring, reviewed at the SF Site, by Peter D. Tillman; published 1998; retrieved September 23, 2021
  4. The Curse of Chalion by Lois McMaster Bujold, reviewed by Simeon Shoul; at Infinity Plus; published August 7, 2002; retrieved September 23, 2021
  5. Magical Goldsmithing: Lois McMaster Bujold’s The Spirit Ring, by Jo Walton, at Tor.com; published February 13, 2013; retrieved September 23, 2021
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.