Product Details
Winterstrike

Winterstrike
By Liz Williams

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Product Description

Winterstrike spy Hestia Mar has been sent to Caud to recover details of an ancient weapon. During her stay in the Martian city, she encounters the ghost of a warrior, who turns out to be the encoded representation of the city’s bombed library. Hestia Mar manages to access the library’s data, but realizes too late what she has done: by downloading the information, she has virtually guaranteed the use of the weapon against Caud by her own government. Desperate to rescue the situation she makes her way back home across the dangers of the Crater Plain.

Meanwhile, in Winterstrike itself, the festival of Ombre has been taking place upon the eve of war. Hestia's cousin Shorn –imprisoned by her family for accidentally consorting with a male – manages to escape. Her sister Essegui, pursuing her to the dangerous mountains of Mars, discovers a plot by creatures who hold the secrets of the Martian past, and its future. While Essegui battles forces back in Winterstrike, Hestia travels to Earth in an attempt to save her city . . .

‘Williams’s prose is unfussy and compelling . . . this is adventurous, thought-provoking science fiction’ The Times


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #78004 in Books
  • Published on: 2009-06-05
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 352 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
'Winterstrike is beautifully written, seamlessly plotted and profound.' --Guardian

Review
'Throughout a twisting, eerie novel, Williams' prose is taut and detailed...a balancing act she sustains quite brilliantly.'

Review
`a very pleasant surprise and comes highly recommend'


Customer Reviews

A very dull "background" volume, it is not readable on its own1
Trilogy used to mean three books- now all too often it means a serial with each book meaningless on its own. Winterstrike is a prime example of this- utterly pointless on its own, one can only assume it is setting up for material due to appear in the further volumes. The trouble with that is that because it is just a background as a book it is so dull that I have no intention of reading those further volumes. It is hugely complex, which is normally a personal preference of mine, and something I enjoy as the various explanations are slowly revealed. The trouble is that in Winterstrike almost none of it gets explained, rendering the whole essentially meaningless. And with no way of understanding where it is all going, I for one rapidly ceased to care.

An interesting and promisiong novel, although ultimately too long winded3
Winterstrike and Caud, two Martian cities, have been fighting intermittently for quite some time over land. Each blame the other for this repetitive conflict and even now, with a bigger evil descending on Mars, the finger is pointed at the other.

Hestia Mar is a spy from Winterstrike in Caud, searching for information in the ruins of its library. When she comes across details of a weapon she does her duty and sends it back to her city. She also comes across a small device that turns out to be the ghost of the library who has been given a mission to watch over Hestia, but this information can't be revealed.

Essegui Harn, cousin of Hestia, is the eldest daughter to a family, one with high ambitions and terrible secrets. Her sister, Shorn, has been stripped of her birth name for consorting with a Vulpen, a man-remnant, an act that brings shame to the family. She is locked in her room for her behaviour, never allowed out. As Ombre approaches and the festival is to begin, Essegui convinces her parents to release Shorn for the night, allowing her some limited freedom for the night.

Secret experiments of Winterstrike's past are now rising from the shadows and putting Mars in danger: the weapon found by Hestia will soon be used. While Hestia is attempting to return to Winterstrike, Essegui chases her sister who has escaped her confinement and is now on the run. Hoping against hope that she is not heading for the rumoured Vulpen across the plains and driven by a terrible act that has stolen part of her soul. With events building and revelations forthcoming, will Winterstrike - and Mars - survive?

Winterstrike is the kind of novel that I would not normally get into, but with such an intriguing write up, plus being the first of a trilogy, I was drawn to it with anticipation. What I found was a well written political adventure that combines science fiction in the distant future with elements of fantasy and the supernatural.

Although it was the science fiction elements that drew me into this one, I found that the story was remarkably light on many details, simply using the location and future time frame as a vehicle to tell the story. The technology that is used in this world is based around the dead, and is appropriately named Haunt-tech. This brings in the supernatural elements to the story, with ghosts, interplanetary travel that will kill you in transit before reviving you and ways for the souls of others, or even part of the soul, to be stolen. The fantasy elements are comparable to gothic steampunk and the whole story has that feel about it - it could quite easily have been a fantasy story with some minor edits.

The whole novel is written in the first person, alternating between the two main characters, Hestia and Essegui. As we are taken on the journey through the eyes of these two characters we are limited in our experiences, only knowing what these characters know and the revelations that come along have a bigger impact due to their perspective. While I enjoy reading from a characters viewpoint, I find it can be limiting at times and I feel that I've missed something - after all, the descriptions are from the characters. I would have liked some third person narrative simply to explore the world further and give it the scale it deserves.

The story moves along at a slow to steady pace, with action interspersed with the searching and discovery by Hestia and Essegui. By the end I got the feeling that there was so much more to come and that the sequel has been very effectively set up. I look forward to see where the characters go from here and what other revelations and surprises will be thrown up along the way.

Although impressive in both prose and scope, I felt that there was something missing, that something that would take it from being a good book to being a great book. If the second volume can expand further on what Winterstrike has delivered it will make the setting up worthwhile, but alone it is simply too slow moving.

Nice cover...1
...shame about the book. It starts well with an evocative gothic/fantasy tinged world, but very soon gets mired in a repetitive, dull runaround where people basically get captured, escape, run around and then get captured again, like a bad episode of Doctor Who; alternate chapters that are narrated by two different characters who are indistinguishable from each other in terms of voice; and a convoluted "plot" that has no discernible pay off, leaving you either confused or, in my case, long passed caring about what was going on. Disappointing. What the Guardian was thinking when describing this a "profound" I have no idea.