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Naomi Kritzer

 

Reviewed by Kelly Lasiter
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Naomi Kritzer
Naomi Kritzer also writes poetry and short stories. Learn more at her website.







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Eliana's Song — (2002) Publisher: For sixteen-year-old Eliana, life at her conservatory of music is a pleasant interlude between youth and adulthood, with the hope of a prestigious Imperial Court appointment at the end. But beyond the conservatory walls is a land blighted by war and inexplicable famine and dominated by a fearsome religious order known as the Fedeli, who are systematically stamping out all traces of the land’s old beliefs. Soon not even the conservatory walls can hold out reality. When one classmate is brutally killed by the Fedeli for clinging to the forbidden ways and another is kidnapped by the Circle — the mysterious and powerful mages who rule the land — Eliana can take no more. Especially not after she learns one of the Circle’s most closely guarded secrets. Now, determined to escape the Circle’s power, burning with rage at the Fedeli, and drawn herself to the beliefs of the Old Way, Eliana embarks on a treacherous journey to spread the truth. And what she finds shakes her to her core: a past destroyed, a future in doubt, and a desperate people in need of a leader — no matter how young or inexperienced...

Naomi Kritzer review Eliana's Song 1. Fires of the Faithful 2. Turning the StormNaomi Kritzer review Eliana's Song 1. Fires of the Faithful 2. Turning the Storm

Naomi Kritzer review Eliana's Song 1. Fires of the Faithful 2. Turning the StormFires of the Faithful

Naomi Kritzer review Eliana's Song 1. Fires of the Faithful 2. Turning the StormEliana’s music-conservatory education is uneventful until Mira and the new song arrive. Mira is her new roommate; Eliana is drawn to her but suspects she is lying about her past. The song — a catchy little ditty about a murderous stepmother –may actually be a cover for a controversial idea. Then the inquisitors of the Fedeli show up at the conservatory, looking for heretics. Eliana is shocked and angered when a friend is executed —— and shocked again when she learns the secret cause behind a famine that has been plaguing the land.

Fires of the Faithful is set in an alternate Italy of roughly the Renaissance period. It follows Eliana as she leaves the conservatory behind, travels through the devastated countryside, and eventually becomes a rebel leader. A music student may seem like an unlikely revolutionary, but Naomi Kritzer shows how her peasant common sense and the lessons instilled at the conservatory enable her to bring a new perspective to the disorganized rebel movement she finds.

Religious persecution is a major theme, but Kritzer turns the usual trope on its head. The dominant religion is analogous to Wicca; it honors a co-equal Lady and Lord and embraces the practice of magic. The “Old Way” it’s trying to stamp out is based on Christianity (though its “God the Father” figure is female). Also interesting is that Eliana has no strong beliefs one way or the other. She was raised in the religion of the Lady and becomes aligned with the Old Way for political reasons, but she is not personally devout; rather, she becomes a rebel because the actions of the ruling Fedeli and Circle are abhorrent.

Kritzer’s flipping of the Pagans vs. Christians script and her non-religious heroine help keep the focus on the politics of faith rather than on faith itself or on which faith the reader is more sympathetic to. The problem is not what either side actually believes; the problem is the way religion can become corrupted by temporal power.

Fires of the Faithful is sad and frightening as Eliana discovers more and more terrible things that the Fedeli and Circle have done to protect their dirty secrets, and becomes stirring as she rises to leadership and starts to shake things up. The prose, especially the dialogue, occasionally feels a little too modern, but the story is absorbing enough that this was only a minor issue for me. Eliana’s story continues in Turning the Storm, which I will be seeking out. —Kelly Lasiter

Dead Rivers — (2004-2006) Publisher: The tale of an impetuous young woman, freeborn in a world of slavery and magic — twenty-year-old Lauria is the favorite aide to Kyros, a powerful military officer. On his authority, she is messenger, observer, and spy. But now she is entrusted with a mission more dangerous than any that have come before Freedom's Gate. After years of relative peace, word has come to Kyros's compound that the bandit tribe known as the Alashi is planning an offensive. It is up to Lauria to infiltrate the Alashi by posing as an escaped slave — a charge that requires she serve in the household of a neighboring officer. From there, she will stage an escape and continue on in her guise as a runaway. But posing as a slave — a virgin concubine, no less — may prove the least of her troubles. For even if she does escape and the Alashi do accept her, how can this freeborn woman convince them she is slave, not spy? And, worse, what if her own views are gradually changing, calling everything she believes about her world into question?

Naomi Kritzer review Dead Rivers 1. Freedom's Gate 2. Freedom's Apprentice 3. Freedom's SistersNaomi Kritzer review Dead Rivers 1. Freedom's Gate 2. Freedom's Apprentice 3. Freedom's SistersNaomi Kritzer review Dead Rivers 1. Freedom's Gate 2. Freedom's Apprentice 3. Freedom's Sisters

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