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   Book Info

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The White Order (Recluse #8)  
Author: L. E. Modesitt, Jr.
ISBN: 0812541715
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review



In this author's popular Recluce fantasies--beginning with The Magic of Recluce--the classic theme of youngsters growing to adult power and responsibility is repeatedly retold in terms of magic skill. Past books focused on the apparent good guys--"black" magicians who use order-magic (cooling, healing, strengthening) and constantly oppose the White Order of chaos wizards whose talent is fire and dissolution. Young hero Cerryl has a natural bent for chaos, and for him the Whites offer the only game in town. Painfully, he learns about balance: order-magic can be deviously used for destruction, chaos can cleanse and anyway requires order-control if it's not to destroy the user. This moves interestingly away from simplistic "black is good, white is bad" magical color-coding ... but although Cerryl is a decent, ethical white wizard, the Order remains unpleasantly tyrannical--for example, an instant life sentence of slave labor for the equivalent of expired license plates. The magic training is interesting if repetitive (apprentices practice firebolts by zapping blockages in the public sewers), but Modesitt's real story lies in waiting for Cerryl to become a full mage of the Order and perhaps confront its injustices in the massive sequel, Colors of Chaos. --David Langford, Amazon.co.uk


From Publishers Weekly
The prolific and popular fantasy author adds to his Recluce series (The Chaos Balance, etc.), with this entry tracing the rise of an orphan, Cerryl, to powerful magicianship. That's a venerable concept, but Modesitt keeps it fresh with crisp characters and a consistent, well-detailed setting. The magical system employed here features white chaos magic, somehow connected to the colors of light, and the magic of order, which is black and associated with cold iron. The background is medieval EuropeanAlargely preliterate, with guilds and apprenticeshipsAbut Modesitt uses historical details to create a vivid, realistic culture instead of a stereotyped fantasy world. Cerryl's apprenticeships in a wood mill and, later, to a scrivener lend depth to his ensuing, more magical, adventures. Like many fantasy heroes, Cerryl is virtuous but has unusual magical potential, leading to opportunities but also to problems, especially from jealous apprentices or mages of the White Order. The theme of power, including its uses and misuses, and its various forms, magical, political and sexual, runs throughout the book. As the novel widens its focus from Cerryl's education to his involvement with war, intrigue and assassination, it becomes more colorful but less original. Still, Modesitt provides the requisite adventure and wizardry, plus people and places that are as true as they are magical. Author tour. Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal
As an apprentice scrivener, Cerryl discovers his inherent talent for chaos magic, inherited from his father, a fugitive white mage. Taken to study with the mages of the White Order of Fairhaven, Cerryl learns to harness magic from his teachersAone of whom is bent on his destruction. Set in the same time period as The Magic Engineer (LJ 3/15/94), Modesitt's ninth novel in his popular "Recluce" series continues the epic history of a world where chaos and order vie for ultimate control. The author's low-key approach to high fantasy results in an intimate, thoughtful tale that belongs in most fantasy collections. Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist
Yet another entry in Modesitt's popular Recluce series, one that upholds the saga's reputation for intelligence, occasional slow pacing, and increasing originality. It is the story of the youth of Cerryl, later one of the great white mages. Orphaned by the death of his hedge-wizard father, he is raised by relatives and later by friends, all of whom try to conceal or discourage his growing gifts. Eventually, he is discovered by the white mages and taken to one of their strongholds for schooling, and also for testing so severe that he may not survive. This volume in the series stands unusually well on its own as a classic and competent coming-of-age story. Longtime followers of Recluce will appreciate it more, however, because of the many quotations in it that refer to events covered in other Recluce books. Modesitt's approach to fantasy is an acquired taste, some say, but a great many readers seem to have acquired it, and libraries should accommodate it. Roland Green


From Kirkus Reviews
Another episodethe eighth so farin Modesitt's continuing battle between White (Chaos) magic and Dark (Order) magic (most recently, The Chaos Balance, 1997). Young orphan Cerryl discovers that he has a talent for glimpsing distant places and people in odd fragments of mirror; and in a mostly illiterate society, he has a hunger to learn how to read. Apprenticed to a kindly miller, whose daughter teaches him his letters, young Cerryl learns the truth about his magic-touched father, and resolves someday to travel to the city Fairhaven, stronghold of the most powerful Chaos magicians, and there discover his destiny. A quality series that's settled into a pleasantly understated, modestly involving groove. -- Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.


Review
"Return to this disciplined and uncompromising world of fantasy. You will not be disappointed."--Realms of Fantasy

"Another entry in Modesitt's popular Recluce series, one that upholds the saga's reputation for intelligence and increasing originality....This volume in the series stands unusually well on its own as a classic and competent coming-of-age story."--Booklist



Review
"Return to this disciplined and uncompromising world of fantasy. You will not be disappointed."--Realms of Fantasy

"Another entry in Modesitt's popular Recluce series, one that upholds the saga's reputation for intelligence and increasing originality....This volume in the series stands unusually well on its own as a classic and competent coming-of-age story."--Booklist



Book Description
L.E. Modesitt's bestselling fantasy novels set in the world of Recluce are among the most popular in contemporary fantasy. Rich in detail, Modesitt's Recluce books are a feast of wonderous marvels. Booklist notes, "Modesitt's elaborate and intelligent working out of a system of magic and a system of technology parallel to it is becoming more the lifeblood of the Recluce books with every new volume. . . his saga continues to gain in popularity."

The White Order is the story of Cerryl, a boy orphaned when the powerful white mages killed his father to protect their control of the world's magic. Cerryl, raised by his aunt and uncle, is a curious boy, attracted to mirrors and books, though he is unable to read. When he is old enough, Cerryl is apprenticed to the local miller. The miller's daughter teaches Cerryl to read his father's books, and it seems that the talent for magic has been passed from father to son. When Cerryl witnesses a white mage destroy a renegade magician, the miller realizes the boy will not be safe there, so Cerryl must be sent to the city of Fairhaven to find his destiny.

Thus Modesitt takes one of the most enduring and mythic themes in fantasy and makes it his own. The White Order is a powerful new addition to the Recluce saga, guaranteed to add many new readers to Modesitt's devoted following.

The White Order is the eighth book in the saga of Recluce.



From the Publisher
"Return to the disciplined and uncompromising world of fantasy. You will no be disappointed." --Realms of Fantasy "Another entry in Modesitt's popular Recluse series, one that upholds the saga's reputation for intelligence and increasing originality...This volume in the series stands unusually well on its own as a classic and competent coming-of-age story." --Booklist


About the Author
L. E. Modesitt, Jr., is the author of the popular fantasies of the Recluce, Spellsinger and Corean series as well as numerous science fiction novels. He lives with his wife, a lyric soprano, in Cedar City, Utah.





The White Order (Recluse #8)

FROM THE PUBLISHER

The White Order is the story of Cerryl, a boy orphaned when the powerful white mages killed his father to protect their control of the world's magic. Cerryl, raised by his aunt and uncle, is a curious boy, attracted to mirrors and books, though he is unable to read. When he is old enough, Cerryl is apprenticed to the local miller. The miller's daughter teaches Cerryl to read his father's books, and it seems that the talent for magic has been passed from father to son. When Cerryl witnesses a white mage destroy a renegade magician, the miller realizes the boy will not be safe there, so Cerryl must be sent to the city of Fairhaven to find his destiny.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

The prolific and popular fantasy author adds to his Recluce series (The Chaos Balance, etc.), with this entry tracing the rise of an orphan, Cerryl, to powerful magicianship. That's a venerable concept, but Modesitt keeps it fresh with crisp characters and a consistent, well-detailed setting. The magical system employed here features white chaos magic, somehow connected to the colors of light, and the magic of order, which is black and associated with cold iron. The background is medieval Europeanlargely preliterate, with guilds and apprenticeshipsbut Modesitt uses historical details to create a vivid, realistic culture instead of a stereotyped fantasy world. Cerryl's apprenticeships in a wood mill and, later, to a scrivener lend depth to his ensuing, more magical, adventures. Like many fantasy heroes, Cerryl is virtuous but has unusual magical potential, leading to opportunities but also to problems, especially from jealous apprentices or mages of the White Order. The theme of power, including its uses and misuses, and its various forms, magical, political and sexual, runs throughout the book. As the novel widens its focus from Cerryl's education to his involvement with war, intrigue and assassination, it becomes more colorful but less original. Still, Modesitt provides the requisite adventure and wizardry, plus people and places that are as true as they are magical. Author tour. (June)

VOYA - Marsha Valance

In The White Order, Modesitt makes a totally new departure in his ongoing Saga of the Recluce, where Order and Chaos continually struggle for dominance. This time the story centers on the white magicians, descendants of refugees stranded on this world centuries ago after a starship crash. The white magicians used ordered energies to terraform the world by force, so as to provide a power source from the resulting imbalance for the use of their children's children. Cerryl, orphaned by the white magicians who executed his Talented father, is recruited as a mage candidate because of his own potential for understanding the forces of order. A survivor, Cerryl avoids the jealous traps set by other white magicians, determined both to survive and protect others from injustice. As in previous books in the Recluce series, Modesitt skillfully combines credible characters, an exceptionally well-realized alien world, plenty of action, and as usual, philosophical discussions of power and the consequences of its misuse, into the fast-moving plot. By focusing for the first time on a protagonist of Order, he deepens our understanding of both Recluce's underlying magical structure and of the almost feudal relationship between the White Order and the inhabitants of the lands they control. The reader learns along with Cerryl, who is studying the background of his own society in the Order's school. The White Order strengthens the reader's understanding of Recluce through the presentation of the Order's world view, as in all the previous volumes the protagonists were from the side of Chaos. In the character of Cerryl, Modesitt gives the reader a hero who must conform to survive, but does so without surrendering his own individual values. As always, Modesitt's newest chapter in the Recluce saga is a worthwhile addition to any YA collection. [Please note: when reading this book for review I noticed that the endpaper map did not agree with the geography of the novel. I contacted Tor and learned that due to an error, The White Order received the endpaper map for The Spellsong War (Tor, 1998/reviewed in this issue) which is not set in Recluce. Anyone who purchases The White Order is entitled to a free poster map of Recluce from Tor. Send your request to: Tor Books, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010, (212) 388-0100, http://www.tor.com.]. VOYA Codes: 5Q 4P S (Hard to imagine it being any better written, Broad general YA appeal, Senior High-defined as grades 10 to 12).

Library Journal

As an apprentice scrivener, Cerryl discovers his inherent talent for chaos magic, inherited from his father, a fugitive white mage. Taken to study with the mages of the White Order of Fairhaven, Cerryl learns to harness magic from his teachersone of whom is bent on his destruction. Set in the same time period as The Magic Engineer (LJ 3/15/94), Modesitt's ninth novel in his popular "Recluce" series continues the epic history of a world where chaos and order vie for ultimate control. The author's low-key approach to high fantasy results in an intimate, thoughtful tale that belongs in most fantasy collections. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 1/98.]

Kirkus Reviews

Another episodeþthe eighth so farþin Modesitt's continuing battle between White (Chaos) magic and Dark (Order) magic (most recently, The Chaos Balance, 1997). Young orphan Cerryl discovers that he has a talent for glimpsing distant places and people in odd fragments of mirror; and in a mostly illiterate society, he has a hunger to learn how to read. Apprenticed to a kindly miller, whose daughter teaches him his letters, young Cerryl learns the truth about his magic-touched father, and resolves someday to travel to the city Fairhaven, stronghold of the most powerful Chaos magicians, and there discover his destiny. A quality series that's settled into a pleasantly understated, modestly involving groove.



     



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