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By the Mountain Bound

Written by Elizabeth Bear

Average Score: 74(8)

For five hundred years the immortal Children of the Light, einherjar and valkyrie, have lived together in the North of Valdyrgard. They were born out of the Sea, each with a shining crystal sword in his or her hand; they are Angels of Light created in the formation of a new world.  But three have come before them, from the death-throes of the old world, Midgard: the world-girdling Serpent, Bearer of Burdens;  the Wolf Fenris, eater of the Sun, who now takes the form of an einherjar; and his demon sister, stealer of souls.

The Children spend their days feasting, fighting, hunting, and guarding their human charges. But one dreadful day a woman is washed up from the sea, a Lady who is no mortal, though she is not valkyrie either. Thus begins the breaking of the Children of the Light, the tarnishing of their power, and the death of Valdyrgard.

By the Mountain Bound is a prequel to Elizabeth Bear’s highly acclaimed All the Windwracked Stars, and tells the painful tale of love and betrayal, sorcery and battle, that led up to the day when Muire was left alone in the snow at the end of the world.

Book Details

Fantasy
Hardcover, 320 Pages
Published by Tor Books on October 27, 2009
ISBN-10 0765318830
ISBN-13 978-0765318831

Reviews


The Green Man Review | Robert M. Tilendis
Review Rating: 100
I've mentioned before that she hits a poetic level rare in fantastic fiction, and in Mountain Bound she's managed to kick that achievement up a notch.
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Fantasy Literature | Greg Hersom
Review Rating: 89
...even though Elizabeth Bear has created a very original and engrossing plot, it's the terrific characters that make this story work.
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Graemes Fantasy Book Review | Graeme Flory
Review Rating: 85
When things do kick off though, Bear proves adept at drawing the reader along with a mixture of action (that is understated yet surprisingly powerful) and a no holds barred look into the minds of the three main characters.
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Library Journal | Jackie Cassada
Review Rating: 80
...a solid choice for mature readers and lovers of Scandinavian myth.
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Publishers Weekly
Review Rating: 80
...demands much from readers, but repays it in vivid, sensual imagery of a wholly different world.
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SFRevu | Sam Lubell
Review Rating: 60
What appears in All the Windwracked Stars to be a more mythic confrontation seems somewhat more petty here.
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Stephen Hunts SF Crownest | Eamonn Murphy
Review Rating: 60
Not everything is set out absolutely clearly and the ending of both books leaves you wondering a bit what exactly happened.
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Boomtron | amberdrake
Review Rating: 40
Ultimately I did not enjoy the book; in fact it was almost painful to my psyche.
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