

There's no one else of the pure bloodline. The old woman who was the White Mare's servant before her told Sarama that she will be the last one.

Agni is the heir of the king of the White Horse tribe Sarama is heir to an older tradition, from before their mother's people became a part of the male-ruled tribes. Her mother died giving birth to her and her twin brother Agni. Sarama is the servant of the White Mare, the Lady of the Horses. The core of faith had long since faded and now it was all just a matter of procedure.Īnyway, I hope to read something better of Judith Tarr in the future.

That's how I viewed the spirituality in this book. There is a good scene where one of the characters relates to Agni about how the women would braid their hair to keep it out of the way. I read about people worshipping their respective deities and, while the women in the Western cities may have felt some temporary bliss, it seemed to me that they were just going through the motions. The gods in this book (whether it is the Lady, Horse Goddess, or Skyfather) are just as removed as they are in "real life". I found that to be as annoying as any Fundementalist tract. The women rule, the men serve, and to every query that anyone posits comes the reply: "the Lady wills it". When he follows his sister westward, with every intention of subduing the matriarchal culture beyond the Great Wood, Agni actually has to think outside his tribal box and consider the political and strategic ramifications of his actions.Īnyone who has read Sjoo or Gimbutas will find the matriarchal cities very familiar.
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The scenes where he captures and trains his own stallion are interesting. Sure, he's arrogant and short-sighted and thinks that being king is the ultimate calling but at least he DOES something. At least Tarr took the time to develop him into a person. Tarr could have at least devoted one chapter to Sarama's actual upbringing with Old Woman.Īgni, Sarama's twin brother, was more interesting. Once in a while, a hint would drop about Old Woman, the previous Priestes and Servant of the Mare who took the infant Sarama and trained her for succession but there was absolutely no real information about Sarama's life with her. All I kept seeing was Sarama, daughter of the Chief of the White Horse People and newly made Servant of Horse Goddess, doing little more than trotting around on her white mare and thinking about how glad she was not to be like all the other women of the tribe: veiled, submissive, and permanently shut away in their tribal tents. I have never read a Judith Tarr novel before but I had read good reviews of her other works, so I was looking forward to reading an entertaining, meaty epic.įor one thing, there is no serious action going on until almost two hundred pages into the story.
