Swordspoint (1987)
by Ellen Kushner
I first heard about Swordspoint through Amazon.com.
I'm quite a regular at Amazon, not just buying things but just
looking up stuff and finding more stuff to read. One of my favorite
features is My Recommendations, which given how many things I've
rated or reviewed, are actually pretty accurate.
So one day when Amazon realized I had a penchant for reading
fantasy books with queer characters (gee, how would it guess?!),
out popped a message on a page saying "Hey, you might like to
read Swordspoint!" (Or something similar, think it was
worded differently.) So I checked out the description, read the
reviews and thought, "Huh, that does sound interesting!"
and you know, ordered it. (Boy, Amazon makes it too easy!)
Swordspoint turned out not to be exactly what I had expected.
Having just come off of reading Lynn Flewelling's delightful,
outstanding Nightrunner series, I was I guess expecting
something a little racier or filled with heart-pounding action
or some magic or something really scary. Instead I found the book
to be just what it says on the back cover, a "melodrama of manners."
There's a well-drawn relationship between a professional swordsman
and a mysterious noble scholar who's abandoned his privilege for
a death wish, and that was fun, but then there was another
half to the story with nobles plotting and scheming, politics
and politenesses and callings cards -- which to me was not so
fun. I loved the bits with dashing Richard St Vier and drunken
bitter Alec, but every time I'd really start to get into them,
the chapter would end and I'd have to slog through a scene of
some noblelady or nobleman's blathering or covering up some secret
or plotting to knock off a rival. To me, patient and literate
as I am, those bits just were boring and dry.
It reminded me of some lost 18th or 19th century novel, only
twist being that the two main heroes are gay lovers and everybody's
okay with that. It's true that in the Nightrunner series,
there's a similar situation (a regular spies, swords and sorcery
book, only with gay lovers), but for me Swordspoint didn't
have the overall story I enjoy so I wasn't nearly as satisfied.
I will say, however, that if you like a book with a lot of intrigue
and intricate plot and old-fashioned literary language, Swordspoint
is probably a book you'd enjoy.
If there was one thing that made my disappointment a little less
with this book, it came at the end, where in the edition I have,
Kushner has included three additional stories set in the Swordspoint
world. I actually enjoyed these stories more than the actual novel!
I think it was the fact that in the stories, all the frilly "melodrama
of manners" stuff was cut out and only the good bits were there.
The stories also had a higher proportion of sexual spice to them.
And in "The Death of the Duke," Kushner creates a magical tale
depicting the final weeks of Alec, as an old man returned to the
nameless city, setting of Swordspoint, and dying amid his memories
of Richard St Vier -- what a wonderful tribute!