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A Brightness Long Ago Is a Fantasy Epic About the Shaping of History

A Brightness Long Ago Is a Fantasy Epic About the Shaping of History

I have a few of what I call “rainy day authors,” those writers whose works I savor; their books are so perfect and beautiful that I hold onto them for the times when I’m feeling burned out on reading and need a book that I know will pull me inside its world. My rainy day authors are people like Neil Gaiman, Daniel Abraham, and Elizabeth Bear, but the name at the top of the list is Guy Gavriel Kay, that beloved Canadian fantasist and most skillful crafter of heartfelt historical epics.

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Through an interlude that breaks down the wall between reader an author, Kay muses about the nature of storytelling in a remarkable way.

So many stories can be told, in and around and braided through the one we are being given. Don’t we all know that stories can be sparks leaping from the bonfire of an offered tale to become their own fire, if they land on the right ground, if kindling is there and a light breeze but not a hard wind?

Someone is deciding what to tell us. What to add, what not to share at all or when (and how) to reveal a thing. We know this, even as we picture in our minds another young man, a tailor’s son from Seressa, remembering a spring ride, how we used to like to sing…

We want to sink into the tale, leave our own lives behind, find lives to encounter even to enter for a time. We can resist being reminded of an artificer, the craft. We want to be immersed, lost, not remember what it is we are doing, having done to us, as we turn pages, look at a painting, hear a song, watch a dance.

Still, that is what is being done to us. It is. (Ch. 9)

A Song for Arbonne

Guy Gavriel Kay

Paperback

$24.00

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The beauty of Kay’s writing is evident on every level, from his perfectly shaped plotting to his deceptively simple prose. There’s a tautness and strength to the writing of this, his 14th novel, as though every word has been perfectly placed to serve and support the whole. Obvious care and attention has been paid to every chapter, paragraph, and sentence, but rather than feeling overworked, the resultant narrative flows like water.

It seems like the Sarantium’s story often comes in twos—The Sarantine Mosaic, which explores the city at the height of its power, is spread across two linked volumes, and now Kay has returned to that world again to recount the events preceding and following the city in the wake of its historic fall. Children of Earth and Sky took place roughly 20 years after the fact, showing readers familiar with the world how things had changed (or not). A Brightness Long Ago is a pseudo-prequel to Children of Earth and Sky, set in the months leading up to Sarantium’s fall to the Asharite grand khalif. Previous experience with the Mosaic and Children of Earth and Sky is not required to enjoy the new novel, however—A Brightness Long Ago stands alone as a compelling, perfectly tuned novel. (Though once you finish it, you’re likely to go racing to buy more of Kay’s books.)

Children of Earth and Sky

Guy Gavriel Kay

Paperback

$24.00

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“We live, it might be said, in unstable times,” Danio muses at the novel’s midpoint. “Dramatic, interesting, magnificent in many ways. But not stable. You would never say that.”

Here, Danio is describing our world too—one rife with political and social upheaval. Kay uses fantasy elements to twist events in his secondary worlds, but the true magic is the way he uses fiction as a lens, sharpening the focus on our own world—our failings and successes, our fears and hopes. A Brightness Long Ago is about looking into the past and recognizing the way our stories come together—the moments large and small that define us, and the inevitability of change.

A Brightness Long Ago stands with the best of Kay’s work and the best fantasy has to offer. With each new novel it becomes clearer that his is an essential voice in the genre, if not one of its loudest. It is a novel as dramatic as it is profound, as readable as it is thoughtful, as powerful as it is exciting.

A Brightness Long Ago is available now.