The weblog of Vlad Spears: musician, science fiction hero, Max/MSP/Jitter gangsta, Daevl incarnate. Currently engaged in fast action on slow sculpture, I have an ongoing love affair with animism as an approach to creativity and an affinity for all things automata, gridded or digital.

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020070211 18:21 •

Emma Bull - War For The Oaks

This wonderful tale of urban fantasy, elfpunk of high order, has been recommended to me by many people over the years, yet for one reason or another Emma Bull’s War For The Oaks didn’t make it onto my stack.  The most recent recommendation came from Martin Spernau, under conditions which prompted an immediate reading.  Am I ever thrilled this Faerie circle has finally appeared!

A musician’s tale, War For The Oaks is set in Minneapolis, Minnesota in the 1980s.  On the surface, it’s the story of a human woman, Eddi McCandry, caught between rival Faerie courts at war with one another, a well-written romp through flash and myth set to a soundtrack of well-chosen period music and songs from Bull’s own band.  On the surface, just enough authentic folklore is woven into the story to create an honest foundation for the rest.  On the surface, it’s an infectious tale I found difficult to put down.

As everyone knows, however, Faerie is never what it seems on the surface.

Bull has written a tale about many things: individual power, self-reliance, ritual and customs, flexibility versus inflexibility and the strengths and weaknesses of both, honor and insult, the value of life, the fountain of creativity and, most of all, about the nature of magic itself.

Ever have the feeling you can cause something to happen simply by thinking passionately about it?  War For The Oaks will make you realize that’s too simple a feeling.  You’re much more powerful.

“Yes, you are.  They’re your images.  Or in some cases, sounds.  When you’re wrapped up in making music, there’s more of you in it than you think.”  Willy stretched his long legs out before him and leaned back.  “You’re casting illusions.”

She looked at Carla.  Eddi could no longer scoff at the possibility of magic—she’d promised the phouka she wouldn’t.  But Carla was free to doubt assertions like Willy’s.

Carla only said, “She is?”

“Mmm.  Just be glad she started with illusions.  If her subconscious was dabbling in the elements, she could have set the Uptown on fire.”

“Rubbish,” the phouka said cheerfully.  “With all due respect, of course.  You know perfectly well that manipulating the elements is conjuring of a high intellectual order.  It does not happen by accident.”  Eddi suspected that the last sentence was for her benefit.  She was grateful; it was nice to know that she wouldn’t burn down her apartment building in her sleep.

“So, how did I know how to do this?” Eddi asked, more or less of the phouka.  “Have you been whispering in my ear?”

He shook his head irritably.  “Were you taught to pull yourself upright, or to crawl?”

“It’s not the same. Those are normal developments.”

The phouka raised one eyebrow.

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