By the Mountain Bound
Written by Elizabeth Bear
Narrated by Ruth Urquhart and Antony Ferguson
3.5/5
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About this audiobook
The Children spend their days feasting, fighting, hunting, and guarding their human charges. But one dreadful day a woman is washed up from the sea, a Lady who is not mortal, though she is not valkyrie either. Thus begins the breaking of the Children of the Light, the tarnishing of their power, and the death of Valdyrgard.
By the Mountain Bound is a prequel to Elizabeth Bear's highly acclaimed All the Windwracked Stars, and tells the painful tale of love and betrayal, sorcery and battle, that led up to the day when Muire was left alone in the snow at the end of the world.
Elizabeth Bear
Elizabeth Bear was born on the same day as Frodo and Bilbo Baggins, but in a different year. She is the Hugo, Theodore Sturgeon Memorial, Locus, and Astounding Award–winning author of dozens of novels and over a hundred short stories. She has spoken on futurism at Google, MIT, DARPA’s 100 Year Starship Project, and the White House, among others. Find her at www.elizabethbear.com.
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All the Windwracked Stars Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5By the Mountain Bound Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Sea Thy Mistress Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for By the Mountain Bound
48 ratings7 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5While I'm not a prude, I cared not for the explicit homosexual erotica between the Wolf and the Warrior (I cannot spell the names!). I understand the need for that love for the story to unfold as it does, but that portion was not warranted. (To be clear, I don't find "straight" erotica in novels to be warranted, either - only VERY rarely is it necessary for the plot.)
This story is the prequel to All the Windracked Stars, and tells of the happenings that lead to the battle that opens the first book. It is not a happy book, nor does it have a happy ending - loves lost, lives lost, betrayal, lies, dark magics.. But overall, it is a GOOD book. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Make it 2.5 stars, maybe? I liked some of this quite a bit and was very eh on other things - especially the batshit decisions to DIE HORRIBLY everyone kept making, rather than using a modicum of sense and thinking of a solution. Like invoking some help from a being who could give it before it was all too late!
Granted, this was a prequel to a book I haven't read yet, and I think she wrote that one before this one, so it makes sense that it would feel like a prequel, but on the last page I'm still left with the feeling of, "Okay...and?" which is a TERRIBLE thing to feel at the end of a book. *sigh*
Again, not awful. Just disappointing because her Elizabethan stuff is so much better - I hope she'll do more in that era soon. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The 3 1/2 stars isn't is more reflective of the fact that I read it singly, instead of as part of its trilogy. I'm trying not to read trilogies piecemeal - I already follow too many universes to keep effective track of all of them.And Norse mythology has never been a favorite of mine, though Bear manages to make the gods seem - almost human. Okay, I'm going to have to review this after re-reading it with the rest of the trilogy.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Really just a fantasy book. The connecton with the previous bookin the series was tenuous, and there was none of the grittiness of that world. A disappointing book from an author I have enjoyed.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I read "All the Windwracked Stars" last year and enjoyed it. This one? Not so much. For some reason it didn't seem as interesting as the previous. The attention is split between three characters - the warrior (Strifbjorne), the historian (Muire) and the wolf (Mingan) - which just becomes a little irritating by the end. While the characters where well developed, they seemed a little bit like the children they are often called, rather than 500+ year old survivors of Ragnarok.Had I read this 'prequal' first I may not have bothered with "All the Windwracked Stars". It did, however, encourage me to find a copy of it to re-read. A decent read, if a bit bland.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I tend to read little in the way of pure fantasy. However, I thought enough of Elizabeth Bear as a writer to have a go at her recent “By The Mountain Bound”. The intent here is I believe for it to be an epic tale, and the writing is in parts like epic poetry. There is some beautiful prose in there, but I found myself getting distracted at times by an overabundance early on of hyphenated words … On the first page in a single sentence we have wood-red, smoke-gray and tarnished-silver. Often the hyphenation seemed to serve no purpose. I am guessing the intent was to set a mood. Well, it-didn't. It just-served to distract me from the-tale.The story never fully engaged me and the book took longer than normal for me to read as a result. Despite not loving this, I enjoyed much of the story which is about change, trust, loyalty, about death, about the end of the world, Ragnarök. Most of the focus is on three primary characters, The Wolf, The Warrior and The Historian. The relationship between two of the main characters Strifbjorn (The Warrior) and Mingan (the Grey Wolf) didn’t work for me. I did like Mingan as an interesting character on his own. He’s certainly the most richly drawn, and intriguing as well. I also liked the young historian Muire quite a lot. It gets a passing grade but I can’t really recommend it.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Bear returns to the Norse-inspired fantasy world of last year’s “All the Windwracked Stars” with this prequel, set thousands of years earlier. As the story opens, Ragnarok has already occurred and the survivors—einherjar and waelcyrge (better known as Valkyries)—have fled the dead land of Midgard to a new world, where for 500 years they have assumed the responsibility of looking after the humans in this world, taking vengeance where vengeance is due. All this ends when Strifbjorn, the charismatic war-leader of the einherjar, finds a half-drowned woman on the beach. When she recovers, the strange woman…neither human nor waelcyrge…declares herself to be the Lady, the goddess whom the einherjar have awaited since the fall of Midgard. Proving her identity by easily defeating Strifbjorn’s secret lover and champion, the einherjar Mingan the Grey Wolf, the Lady begins to sow discord among the einherjar and waelcyrge, encouraging them in actions that they have long believed to be taboo and causing those who follow her to become the Tarnished, unable to access the Light within. Those who stayed true to Strifbjorn struggle to overthrow the rule of the false Lady, knowing even as they do so that it will likely come to outright war…and that if it comes to outright war, it is unlikely that any will survive it.Elegant, demanding, and vividly drawn, “By the Mountain Bound” would be a wonderful choice for lovers of mythology and fantasy alike.