Flamingnet Student Book Reviewer KBer
In Seaborn, Chris Howard explores a new dimension of urban
fantasy. Rather
than keeping to the city as the genre would imply, Howard
delves into an
undersea world. Seaborn weaves the tales of Kassandra, an
exiled Seaborn royal
desiring revenge while trying to free herself from her
ancestry, Corina, a college
student struggling to survive a Seaborn sorcerer's
possession, and Aleximor, the
sorcerer working to possess Corina in order to enact
revenge on Seaborn's
royalty. It is no surprise, then, that their worlds would
collide, integrating
pursuits of revenge, multiple fronts of war, and power
struggles while splitting
time on shore and under the water. Of the three narrators,
Seaborn focuses on
the heroines Lady Kassandra and Corina and their efforts
to (re)gain control of
their own lives.
Chris Howard's first installation of
this epic fantasy takes
fantasy readers in a new direction. His passages are
densely packed with detail
and each chapter reads smoothly. His characters appeal to
all readers, whether
they are familiar with the genre or not. In particular,
despite her inhuman
characteristics, Kassandra is every bit as real as Corina,
the Californian student
whose main preoccupation until her possession was her
latest break-up. My
main complaint with this novel was the amount of names.
With so many, Howard
should have more gradually introduced each character, to
make understanding
the complex history an easier task for the reader. I would
strongly suggest that
fantasy lovers who are tired of vampire novels check this
book out. One warning,
though: the novel is quite graphic, so I wouldn't
recommend it to anyone with a
weak stomach.
The novel is very graphic and the detailed
violence would not
be appropriate for younger readers.
Rating:7
Reviewer
Age:19
Reviewer City, State and Country: Farmington, CT
USA