- Passage (2008 novel)
infobox Book |
name = Passage
image_caption = Cover of first edition (hardcover)
author =Lois McMaster Bujold
cover_artist = Julie Bell
country =United States
language = English
series = The Sharing Knife, Vol. 3
genre =Fantasy novel
publisher = Eos (HarperCollins )
release_date = April, 2008
media_type = PrintHardbound
pages = 437 pp (first edition, hardback)
isbn = ISBN 978-0-06-137533-0
preceded_by = Legacy
followed_by = Horizon (in press)Passage is a novel by
Lois McMaster Bujold , published in 2008. It is the third in thetetralogy "The Sharing Knife".Plot synopsis
Passage is the immediate sequel to "Legacy" in The Sharing Knife series. It takes farmer's daughter Fawn and Lakewalker maverick Dag back to her home farm as a first step on their 'honeymoon trip' to the Southern Sea, which is analogous to the
Gulf of Mexico in The Sharing Knife series' alternate-world setting. At the farm they add the first of a considerable list of fellow-travelers: Fawn's older brother Whit.Once on their way again another odd companion is added by accident, quite literally, as Hod the charity-case helper of the teamster taking them to find flatboat passage on the Grace River (the
Ohio River ) gets his kneecap shattered by Dag's ill-tempered horse. This begins a series of events in each of which Dag's ground-working abilities are stretched past old limits, ground being the series setting's term for what might well be read aschi . Hod happens to owe much of his sloth and sly theft of edibles to a well-grown tapeworm, not suspected by his employer and only noticed in passing by Dag. But by his good curing works Dag has, as he feared, left himself open to an avalanche of farmer folk with ailments. Much of the novel follows out his attempts to present what Lakewalkers do, how, and with what limitations, in ways that farmers should understand. This action violates long-standing Lakewalker secrecy about just these matters. Dag, in his effort to reduce a culture gap that has already led to violent misunderstandings, sees no choice but to risk apostasy.The core of the novel is set on a
flatboat , patterned on craft used in the middle 1800s to move goods downstream on America's navigable rivers, and large enough to need a crew of around eight (and with space for cargo, chickens, a goat, and Dag's horse). For the details of this pre-steamboat era Ms. Bujold has drawn from a number of histories and biographies, listed and annotated in an Author's Note page at the very end of the text. Like the rest of the series this is a romance, but one that rides on deeper questions of personal and social relationship, including those of leadership, honesty, caste relations and power. It ends with the motley crew that has made its way to the mouth of the Gray River (theMississippi River ) having a picnic on the sands of the River's delta and considering the whens and hows of their return journey up-river.A fourth volume, "The Sharing Knife: Horizon", due February, 2009, will complete the tetrology.
Awards
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.