Crown of Stars (series)

Crown of Stars (series)
Crown of Stars
KingsDragon Cover.gif
Cover of the first edition of King's Dragon
King's Dragon, Prince of Dogs, The Burning Stone, Child of Flame, The Gathering Storm, In the Ruins, Crown of Stars
Author Kate Elliott
Country United States
Language English
Genre Speculative fiction
Publisher DAW Books
Published 1997-2006

Crown of Stars is a series of epic fantasy novels by American author Alis A. Ramussen, under the pen-name Kate Elliott. The series consists of seven novels.

Contents

Novels

Storyline overview

Crown of Stars is set in Novaria, a continent heavily inspired by medieval Europe. Over the course of the novels it is revealed that 2,700 years prior to the present a war erupted between humanity and a race of elf-like beings called the Ashioi. Human sorcerers were able to banish the Ashioi homeland to another plane of existence, but in doing so unleashed a vast cataclysm upon the world that devastated much of humankind. Humanity recovered, initially under the rule of the mighty Dariyan Empire, and later under its successor states, guided by the wisdom of the Daisanite Church (which is heavily influenced by Christianity).

The story opens with the kingdoms of Wender and Varre, unified under the rule of King Henry, threatened by both external and internal threats. Sabella, Henry's elder half-sister, is fomenting rebellion against his rule in Varre, whilst the inhuman Eika have invaded from the north, raiding the north coast and threatening the city of Gent. In King Henry's court there is intrigue brewing as Henry has not chosen an heir from his three legitimate children, and it is well known that he favours his bastard son Sanglant, who by the law cannot inherit the throne.

The series follows the fortunes of two young people, Alain and Liath, as they are drawn into this web of intrigue, eventually learning that the banished Ashioi homeland is being drawn back to Earth, but its return will spark a cataclysm as great as the one that accompanied its departure.

Historical parallels

Crown of Stars is heavily influenced by real history, particularly that of Europe in the early medieval period. In an interview Kate Elliott acknowledged that many of the cultures in her world are drawn directly from real-world sources[1]:

Alba = Britain, Salia = France, Varre = The Low Countries, Wendar = Germany, North Mark = Denmark, Eikaland = Norway & Sweden, Polenie = Poland, Salavii = Slavs, Ungria = Hungary, Karrone = Switzerland, Darre = Rome, Aosta = Italy, Arethousa = Byzantium, Quman = assorted steppe tribes (Tartars etc) or the Golden Horde, Hessi merchants = Jewish traders, Ashioi = Aztecs, Kartiako = Carthage, Jinna = Persia.

The writing of the series

Elliott had long been a major fan of J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings and had planned to write a similar long epic fantasy, but decided to do something a bit different first by writing science fiction, most successfully in the Jaran universe. During this time she planned her epic fantasy storyline and drew on real-life history for inspiration. After deciding to take a break from the Jaran series, she began work on Crown of Stars.

The series was originally envisaged as a trilogy, with a sequel trilogy to follow. This expanded to four volumes, and then Elliott chose to split the fourth volume in two after difficulties emerged in the writing process. The series then expanded to six volumes. However, after completion of the sixth volume the publishers decided that at 430,000 words it was too large to be published in one volume, so it was split into two books published four months apart. Thus the series became seven books long.


Interviews

References

  1. ^ Chronicles Network interview

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Crown of Stars —   Author(s) Alice Sheldon (as James Tiptree, Jr.) …   Wikipedia

  • Crown of Immortality — The Crown of Immortality, held by the allegorical figure Eterna (Eternity) on the Swedish House of Knights fresco by David Klöcker Ehrenstrahl The Crown of Immortality is a literary and religious metaphor traditionally represented in art first as …   Wikipedia

  • Crossroads (series) — Crossroads Spirit Gate, Shadow Gate, Traitor s Gate Author Kate Elliott Country United States Language English Genre …   Wikipedia

  • Crown Australian Poker Championship — Sport Texas Hold em Founded 1998 No. of teams No officially recognized teams Country(ies) …   Wikipedia

  • Huntsville Stars — MiLB infobox name = Huntsville Stars founded = 1985 city = Huntsville, Alabama misc = uniform class level = Double A (1985–present) past class level= current league = Southern League (1985–present) conference = division = North Division past… …   Wikipedia

  • Merlin (series 1) — Merlin series 1 Complete DVD Set Box Art Country of origin United Kingdom …   Wikipedia

  • List of Ace titles in numeric series — In January 1969, Ace Books switched from a letter series code for its books to a numeric series. The number does not indicate sequence of publication, unlike the number in the letter series codes; instead it identifies the alphabetic position of… …   Wikipedia

  • CoDominium (book series) — CoDominium is a series of future history novels by Jerry Pournelle. Contents 1 The CoDominium series 2 History of the CoDominium universe 2.1 Formation of the CoDominium …   Wikipedia

  • List of Mario series characters — For a list of enemies in the Mario series, see Recurring enemies in the Mario series. Mario series characters. Top row, left to right: Bowser, Bowser Jr., Lakitu (flying), Toad, Toadette, Toadsworth, Princess Peach, Mario, Luigi, Princess Daisy,… …   Wikipedia

  • List of Ace SF numeric-series single titles — Ace Books have published hundreds of science fiction titles, starting in 1953. Many of these were Ace Doubles (dos à dos format), but they also published many single volumes. Between 1953 and 1968, the books had a letter series identifier; after… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”