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The Dancers Of Arun (2000)

The Dancers of Arun (2000)

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Rating
3.77 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
0441006876 (ISBN13: 9780441006878)
Language
English
Publisher
ace trade

About book The Dancers Of Arun (2000)

Elizabeth A. Lynn is a highly nuanced and subtle writer, and in my opinion doesn't receive the acclaim to which she is entitled. Arun is the second book in the Chronicles of Tornor series, and the best of the three. The others are also well worth reading, though, and read in order will provide puzzle pieces that serve to explain events and references that are shared among them.All three books are coming of age stories (sometimes referred to as bildungsromans,) but this one is the most focused in that respect. We see the medieval world and culture through the eyes of Kerris, a teenage boy who lost an arm as an infant and was fostered and trained as a scribe at Tornor Keep. His older brother Kel is a cheari, one of the highly respected dancing warriors, but Kerris has seen him only rarely when he got as far north as Tornor.When Kerris begins to manifest psi talents (after puberty, as seems to be traditional in the works of many authors) Kel comes to take him from Tornor to Elath, the home town of their mother and a famed training school for those with the "witch talents." Kel is a patterner, which is to say he can see into the future and sometimes change the course of events by early action. Kerris, however, is an inspeaker, or empathic telepath. His growing ability to link with his brother Kel even at a distance is what awakened the older man to the need for education and fostering among his own people.The journey through the farmbelt of Galbareth to Elath, as seen by Kerris, reveals a great deal of his own inner turmoil as well as the culture of his world. I am reminded of many of the works of Ursula K. LeGuin, as well as some of Marion Zimmer Bradley's Darkover novels. Readers who have enjoyed either of those authors will almost certainly like Lynn as well. Highly appropriate for teen or adult readers with a sensitivity to subtleties or any interest in non-standard gender roles. The conclusion is bittersweet and hopeful at once, and leaves much open for discussion and speculation.

If I could point to just one book and say "That book made a mark on me", it would be The Dancers of Arun.Yes, Lynn has a choppy style of writing (which didn't bother me as much at 13 when I first read it as it does today). But she also created a world in this series that I didn't want to leave (and that I would still love to crawl into). Part renaissance, part Asian, part fantasy with a heavy focus on the links between art and war, it is Lynn's characters and, more importantly, her messages of tolerance and acceptance that guide each of these books (set in the same world but over the course of more than a century).Okay so...yes, her books have gay themes. And yes, in this one, there is a pair of (consensually) incestual brothers. That sounds way more sorted than it is (seriously...prime time TV has relationships that are significantly more offensive and graphic than this one). There is, however, nothing gratuitous in the relationships of Lynn's characters (although I'd guess that no one who hasn't read these will believe me). Ultimately, her message is this: Love is what's important. Not gender. Not race. Not even necessarily monogamy. What matters is honesty and the ability to open your heart to another person. To use whatever skills you have at your disposal to help and to heal.And that, I think, is a message worth sharing.

Do You like book The Dancers Of Arun (2000)?

Time has passed since the events of 'Watchtower', and Van's groups of dance performers/martial artists, known as chearis, have spread throughout the nation of Arun, becoming respected as bringers of peace and balance, although already their inception and history are passing into legend, details forgotten.Kerris, a young man crippled as a child in a violent raid, is suddenly picked up by the older cheari brother that he never knew, but whom he has always had a confusing and intimate mental bond with. Brought from the only house he can remember into a group that has many mental talents, he realizes that he may have more options than just that of being a scribe. He is trying to figure out what to do, both about his future and his feelings for his brother, when the chearis' village is overrrun by raiders of the same ethnicity as those that crippled him years ago. However, these are outlaws, exiled for the same mental gifts that the chearis share.This book does a good job of portraying the classic 'talents' such as telekinesis, telepathy, etc, in a believable way, and in portraying a society without taboos which are deeply ingrained in ours in an interesting, non-condemning way.
—Althea Ann

I simply love this book.It's not overly fancy. there's no big "bang" anywhere. but there's character growth. and relationships. there's harmony in everything. the plot feels right and natural.also: I love the ease with which sexuality and love is treated. people love each other for the sale of the other person, regardless of gender.there's also different people with disabilities. but apart from Kerris' none of the disabilities is seen as such. they are simply a part of that person. the open ending makes me crave more of the story and I wish it never ended.
—Soneaselene

Crippled as a child, Kerris lives in Tornor Keep and trains as a scribe. But he's long had an unusual psychic link to his older brother Kel--and one day Kel comes to him and offers to take him away with his chearis, a group of dancing warriors. The Dancers of Arun is a distant, indirect sequel to Watchtower, and each book stands alone; it's similar to its predecessor in all the best ways, and improves on some of that book's flaws. Characters and their relationships star, with plot serving only as a vehicle towards character growth (the plot here is both more local and unique than in Watchtower). Kerris is a superb protagonist, a convincing young adult--immature but not petty, with distinct potential for growth--whose disability is important but not exploited. Unusual, intriguing, and beautifully rendered relationships abound: Lynn violates almost every heteronormative expectation without fetishizing the violations, and the emotional landscape that grows around Kerris is varied and vibrant, ranging from friendship to romance, from a chosen family of intimate friends to joyful polyamory; there's enough situational difficulty and character depth that it doesn't read as a wish-fulfillment fantasy. Lynn's prose remains somewhat stilted, and while functional the plot is far from memorable. But this is what my id is full of--troubled characters, complex emotions, unusual and lovely interactions--and so I find it hard to view The Dancers of Arun objectively and I certainly don't mind its flaws. I recommend it enthusiastically to any reader that shares a similar interest in character and relationship.
—Juushika

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