The Naming – Alison Croggon
For as long as she can remember, Maerad has been a slave in a Gilman’s Cot, an isolated and very rough settlement from which escape is virtually impossible. She has two sources of comfort: the fact that men leave her alone because they think she is a witch, and the lyre her mother left her. A mysterious stranger appears, and when it becomes clear that she can see him despite his invisibility spell, offers her escape. Cadvan is a Bard battling the evil (isn’t that always the case), and he soon realizes not just that Maerad is a Bard herself from the house of Pellinor, which was thought extinct, but that she is, in fact, the Chosen One. In other words, the battle between good and evil will depend on Maerad.
This was fantastic fantasy. Full of adventure and originality, I couldn’t put this down — and am eagerly awaiting the next installment, to be released in a couple of weeks. Sometimes Croggon’s prose was a little overblown and I stumbled over phrases. ( Like “…he said, subduedly” for Pete’s sake. I full-on tripped on that, never mind stumbled. SUBDUEDLY.) Nonetheless, highly recommend.
***Update on this: Steve is now reading it and is thoroughly engrossed. Every time I try to talk to him he says, “Sh!!! It’s a battle!!!” Never mind the fact that he’s said this through all the Patrick O’Briens, the Abhorsen trilogy, too. I can see we’re going to be fighting over the next volume.