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Kai Meyer

1969-
Reviewed by Bill Capossere
and Ruth Arnell
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kai meyer fantasy author
Kai Meyer
also writes screenplays and is a co-creator of the role-plaing game ENGEL. Find out more at Kai Meyer's website.






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Dark Reflections — (2005-2007) Young adult. Publisher: Winged stone lions fly through the skies of an imagined Venice, which is besieged by the armies of a revived Egyptian Pharaoh. Orphans Merle and her blind friend Junipa are apprenticed to Arcimboldo, the maker of mysterious mirrors, and find his housekeeper, Unke wears a mask to hide her mermaid's wide mouth of sharp shark's teeth. Merle carries a mirror made of water, and Unke feels the vibration of her connection with the mystical Flowing Queen who protects the Venice lagoon. In the mirror Junipa sees something she cannot tell. Meeting the attractive pickpocket Serafin, Merle overhears corrupt Venetian councillors making a deal with the Egyptians, over a flask containing the essence of the Flowing Queen. Serafin is caught, but Merie flees with the flask and is convinced by the Queen to drink its contents, and from then on carries the Flowing Queen inside her. Envoys from Hell — in this world, a real, geographical place — arrive in Campo San Marco, demanding Venice forms an alliance with Hell, or be destroyed. Vermithrax, one of the last talking stone lions, whisks Merle up from the burning piazza, and away over the mountains to find help...

fantasy book reviews Kai Meyer Dark Reflections: 1. The Water Mirror 2. The Stone Light 3. The Glass Wordfantasy book reviews Kai Meyer Dark Reflections: 1. The Water Mirror 2. The Stone Light 3. The Glass Wordfantasy book reviews Kai Meyer Dark Reflections: 1. The Water Mirror 2. The Stone Light 3. The Glass Word
Available in audio formats

book review kai meyer water mirror dark reflectionsThe Water Mirror

fantasy book reviews Kai Meyer Dark Reflections: 1. The Water Mirror 2. The Stone Light 3. The Glass WordThe Water Mirror
is a strong start to a series that gives a small sense of resolution at the end but really ends mid-adventure. Before it ends though it has introduced enough characters, plots, and teasing hints that the reader is left wanting much more. It's certainly one of the better beginnings out there. The setting is an alternate Venice whose canals are filled with sharp- teethed mermaids, whose streets are patrolled by stone lions (a few of which can fly), and whose people are protected by the mysterious Flowing Queen, who has kept them safe for 30 years while they are besieged by the Egyptian empire and its mummy armies that have seemingly conquered nearly all of the world save Venice and Hell.

Yes, it turns out Hell is a real place, discovered some years ago, and its ruler is offering Venice aid against the Egyptians (merely a pinprick of blood for all Venetians is the cost). Into this context come two young orphan girls, Merle (who has the eponymous magical water mirror) and Junipa (who is blind), newly apprenticed to Arcimboldo, maker of magic mirrors. Soon after their apprenticeship Junipa is given silver mirrors for eyes, allowing her to see, and Merle meets Serafin, a young weaver's apprentice and master thief. Soon, all of them, along with Arcimboldo's housekeeper Eft, are caught up in the political and military chaos: Hell's ruler is getting impatient with the Venetian Council's stalling with regard to his offers of alliance, some on the Council have decided to sell out to the Egyptian ruler and the Flowing Queen has lost her ability to protect the city and been captured in a vial of water. And there's also a centuries old flying stone lion to be freed, though he may or may not be sane. Though Merle is the main character and the one who takes on the major quest to save the city, the others also have their roles to play, some more mysterious than others'.

The setting is nicely detailed and atmospheric. The history is concisely but credibly conveyed. The characters are well-constructed and developed enough so that one wants to know more and see more with regard to them all. The plot is swift-moving, suspenseful, and engaging and Meyer does an excellent job of revealing just enough to pique the reader's interest, whether it be with regard to Hell or Egypt or Merle's magic mirror or Junipa's eyes, etc. The Water Mirror is a rich read, with much to like and almost nothing to complain about. A quick and engaging read whose only disappointment is the wait until the next book comes along. Strongly recommended. —Bill Capossere


book review kai meyer water mirror dark reflectionsThe Water Mirror

The Water Mirror by Kai Meyer is set in an alternative Venice where mermaids swim the canals and the city guards patrol on stone lions. Two young orphan girls are apprenticed to Arcimbaldo, a mysterious craftsman of magical mirrors. Merle, the more adventurous of the pair, joins with Serafin, an apprentice from across the road, in some innocent flirtations that turn into a dangerous quest when they overhear some of the Councilors conspiring to capture the Flowing Queen, the mysterious goddess responsible for protecting Venice from the encircling mummy troops of the Egyptian empire. As they seek to protect the city that is their home, they will make strange alliances, discover hidden secrets, and learn the truth about the Flowing Queen.

This novel for young adults is a fantastical journey through a setting that is imbued with magic, while the actual practice of magic is outlawed. Kai Meyer wrote the tale in German, and the translation is excellent, creating a pace that meanders through the canals as the characters are introduced, but then picks up as the action unfolds. The characters are well-drawn personalities, and Meyer has a gift for small descriptive details that distinguish characters from each other, like Junipa’s mirrored eyes and the housekeeper’s mask.

My main criticism is that Meyer introduces several new plot points in the final chapters, so the story doesn’t actually have any sort of temporary conclusion, but instead just a lull in the action. While I understand that Meyer is trying to set up a trilogy, it is an unsatisfying ending to an exquisitely written tale. The overall excellence of the book makes the ending even more disappointing.

I listened to the Listening Library’s recording of this story, and was highly impressed with the narrator, Toby Longworth. Mr. Longworth has an amazing range of voices and a deeply resonant reading voice that imbued the setting with all the mystery and magic that any author could desire. I will definitely be reading the next two volumes in this series, and would recommend The Water Mirror to all young adult audiences, and adults who like historical fantasy. —Ruth Arnell


The Stone Light by Kai MeyerThe Stone Light

fantasy book reviews Kai Meyer Dark Reflections: 1. The Water Mirror 2. The Stone Light 3. The Glass WordFleeing from a fictitious Renaissance Venice on the back of the flying lion Vermithrax, the orphaned Merle is persuaded by the Flowing Queen, the mysterious entity that had for so long protected Venice from the besieging Egyptian armies but now inhabits Merle’s body, to seek help from Lord Light, the ruler of Hell. Back in Venice, a small rebel army is gathering under the guidance of another mysterious power who is determined to protect the city against the Egyptian army whatever the cost. The pharaoh is also beset by treachery from within his own forces. How will all these competing forces be resolved?

The answer is they won’t. The Stone Light is the second book in the Dark Reflections trilogy by Kai Meyer. The first book set up an intriguing and mysterious Venice, and just when the action started the book ended. It wasn’t even really a cliffhanger, but rather felt like the publisher had decided to hack a long novel into three short books. This second book exacerbates the problem of the first. It reads like a fancy cocktail party, where the host is taking you around and introducing you to a bunch of important people, and hinting at dark secrets and hidden pasts in between walking you from room to room. This entire book is exposition. None of the major story lines get advanced in a meaningful way and just when we get to the point that we know the backstory on all the major characters that Meyer has introduced, the story again stops. There is no meaningful conclusion, and there is no way for The Stone Light to stand alone outside of its place in the series.

The prose is beautifully rendered (this is a translation into English by Elizabeth Crawford), and Meyer does a lovely job with world building, but at this point I am so irritated by the lack of meaningful action and the wretched job of plot development in each book that I am not sure I will pick up the third book in the series.Ruth Arnell

Wave Walkers — (2006-2007) Young adult. Pirate Wars was also published as The Water Weavers. Publisher: The pirates of the Caribbean have a name for kids who can walk on water — they call them polliwogs. As far as 14-year-old Jolly knows, she's the last polliwog still alive. She is valuable to the pirate captain who raised her, for she can sneak up on an enemy ship by walking over the waves. When someone sets a trap for Jolly's ship, Jolly alone escapes. She is washed up on a tiny island inhabited by a farming family—and the ghosts who labor for them. The farmers have a son, Munk, who has been raised almost in hiding. Munk longs to go to sea, but his parents say that they are afraid of pirates, and they have forbidden Munk to reveal his true identity — he, too, is a polliwog. But pirates are not the only threat in the Caribbean. Evil forces are stirring, and a demon from the sea attacks and murders Munk's parents. Was the demon really after Munk? And Jolly, too? Why are the polliwogs so valuable, and who wants them enough to kill for them? Jolly and Munk must sail with a strange crew of outcasts, led by the mysterious Ghost Trader, to avenge their loved ones and try to stop an ancient, malevolent force known as the Maelstrom. What it will cost both teens, no one can tell — in this thrilling, swashbuckling fantasy from the extraordinary Kai Meyer.

Kai Meyer Wave Walkers: 1. Pirate Curse 2. Pirate Emperor 3. Pirate WarsKai Meyer Wave Walkers: 1. Pirate Curse 2. Pirate Emperor 3. Pirate WarsKai Meyer Wave Walkers: 1. Pirate Curse 2. Pirate Emperor 3. Pirate Wars

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