Magelord by Terry Mancour
MINALAN GETS MEDIEVAL! When you defeat the invading goblin army, get knighted on the field of battle, gifted with lands and gold, usually your happily-ever-after is . . . happy. But now that Minalan the Spellmonger has been ennobled and enfiefed, Sire Minalan has a task cut out for him that makes defeating goblins seem like child’s play: moving his very pregnant bride and a few thousand refugees from Boval Vale into the remote, sparsely-peopled Domain of Sevendor. But when he arrives, he finds the land withered from neglect, filled with superstition and suspicion, a third of his domain has been conquered before he got there, and the castle he now owns hasn’t been maintained in decades. As Minalan manages the challenges of being a noble, being a mage knight, being the lord of the manor, being a landlord, and fending off a belligerent (and well-armed) neighbor, he also has to learn how to be a husband, father, and a leader of a people. Then the fateful night his son is finally born, Minalan learns the nature of fear, as he, his family, and his very realm are forever changed when the spell he casts to save their lives transforms the land. Minalan, his apprentices Sir Tyndal and Sir Rondal, his dour but efficacious castellan Sir Cei, and his moody wife struggle through the winter and defend their domain in his attempt to prove what a Magelord can do for his people when he puts magic in their service. But in the distance, the threat of a renewed war with the goblins looms as they approach the Riverlands, the Gilmoran baronies that are the heart of the Duchies. The contentious High Magi convene to constitute the new Arcane Orders, while the fanatical Royal Censorate of Magic plots defeat them and the thousands of hedgemagi, witches and footwizards they terrorized now see Minalan as a hero. The sinister Family schemes to promote Duke Rard II to become King Rard I of the newly-united Kingdom of Castalshar – over a pile of bodies, if necessary. And suddenly, out of the sky fall dragons in the service of the Dead God to strike at the strength of the nascent Kingdom. How can Sire Minalan fight goblins, plots, poverty and politics, all from his remote and rustic vale while keeping the peasants in line and the Warbird of West Fleria at bay? With wit, courage, determination, and a healthy dose of magic. And when the new King tasks him to find a way to slay a dragon, an ordinary knight might shy away from the quest. For Sire Minalan, it’s just another day on the job as a MAGELORD!
My thoughts
I do think this could be my favorite book in the series. I have read eight or nine so far, but I really love this book. I have been a succor for political intrigue. Battles can become old, and stale, and really what goes on behind the scenes is more important.
Warning,,,, there be spoiler afoot.
He shows up in a land that is crap. He picked it, with advice I am sure, but he picked a place that was defensible and something he thought he could make more. When he shows up, half the kingdom was illegally taken over by another duke, and the man the steward of the place is drunk and whoring. He inherits a land that has a fraction of the people, a fraction of the buildings, and a dump. On top of this he has gathered the Sevendori refugees, and they are heading here to make this area their new home.
He kicks out the steward, and has to start fixing the place and preparing it for the influx of people. He reclaims the other valley at yule from the kid whose father had illegally taken the land. Then defend, build the valley, give out witch stones, deal with rivals,
He magically transforms a mountain into a special stone that has never been seen before, and it draws the interest of other magical races. The goblins are invading, and they have dragons, DRAGONS.
He picks up apprentice number three, sees the Duke made King, creates the new magical orders, and basically spends a lot of time planning his land, protecting, and just trying to keep things together. Then at the heights of all this has to fight more and more, and is drawn into the fight with the goblins again, with their dragon. Where is 3rd apprentice, and Sire Kay become renown heroes.
I loved it. Loved it so much. I mean one of my favorite books in the last few years was The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison. It is just a book about politics, well not just about politics, however that behind the scenes stuff that keeps things going, and protecting from backstabbing neighbors is fantastic if it is done right, and terrible if it is done wrong.
I loved his thought, he can get annoying when he gets in the long discussions with other wizards about where things are going. I think a few times Terry Mancour can get rolling and just add in a bit too much.
Slowly we are starting to see the Magelord become comfortable with power, and leading. He has been pushed into this, and it is awkward for him. Having to be a judge disturbs him, but he also knows it has to be done. The characters growth is something that I enjoy. I look back now at too many books where the characters do not change, they stay the same. If the writer wrote them nervous and hesitant, they are that way for a dozen books. It is refreshing to see him get better.
I am getting used to the strange cursing. It is not as offensive or as prevalent as the last two books, but still there, and still not for smaller kids. It is just fun, and enjoyable.