The Sharing Knife (Passage, Book 3)

 
4.5 based on 36 reviews.

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Hardcover Book, 448 pages

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Acclaimed science fiction and fantasy writer Lois McMaster Bujold—five-time winner of the Hugo Award—brings us the third installment in her New York Times bestselling romantic fantasy

The Sharing Knife, Volume Three: Passage

Young Fawn Bluefield and soldier-sorcerer Dag Redwing Hickory have survived magical dangers and found, in each other, love and loyalty. But even their strength and passion cannot overcome the bigotry of their own kin, and so, leaving behind all they have known, the couple sets off to find fresh solutions to the perilous split between their peoples.

But they will not journey alone. Along the way they acquire comrades, starting with Fawn's irrepressible brother Whit, whose future on the Bluefield family farm seems as hopeless as Fawn's once did. Planning to seek passage on a riverboat heading to the sea, Dag and Fawn find themselves allied with a young flatboat captain searching for her father and fiancé, who mysteriously vanished on the river nearly a year earlier. They travel downstream, hoping to find word of the missing men, and inadvertently pick up more followers: a pair of novice Lakewalker patrollers running away from an honest mistake with catastrophic consequences; a shrewd backwoods hunter stranded in a wreck of boats and hopes; and a farmer boy Dag unintentionally beguiles, leaving Dag with more questions than answers about his growing magery.

As the ill-assorted crew is tested and tempered on its journey to where great rivers join, Fawn and Dag will discover surprising new abilities both Lakewalker and farmer, a growing understanding of the bonds between themselves and their kinfolk, and a new world of hazards both human and uncanny.

Product Details

  • Media: Hardcover Book, 448 pages
  • Publisher: Eos (April 22, 2008)
  • Edition: 1
  • ISBN-10: 0061375330
  • ISBN-13: 9780061375330
  • Dimensions: 6 x 9 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.55 lbs
  • Note: Some of this information came from Amazon.com

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Customer Reviews

  • Rating Another winner from LMB  Apr 23, 2008 (37 of 38 found this helpful)

    If you liked the first two books in the series, then you will like this one. However, for those new to the series, don't start here! Although there is enough backstory to make this book stand alone, it reads much better if you have the full history of Fawn and Dag. (And there are many spoilers for the first two books in this one).

    This book is essentially Dag's story - his search for his new identity, atonement for his past, his ambivalence in dealing with his new abilities. The romance/relationship issues that drove the first two novels are not central to this book. Fawn's viewpoint is here, but mainly acts as another lens for Dag's story. The secondary characters and subplots are well-rounded and interesting, and the setting is rich.

    This series is very different from LMB's Vorkosigan or Chalion series, and personally I prefer her other books as more fast-paced and (at least on the surface) more complex. However, I am glad that the author continues to stretch herself, and try new things, because I wouldn't want her to start writing the same book over and over again (a trap too many authors fall in).

    I gave this book four stars instead of five both because of that personal preference, and because of a minor flaw - Dag's motivation for starting some very strange experiments and pushing the limits with his new abilities didn't seem clear to me, although it is important to the plot. This book is an improvement over the first two, though, because it stands alone much better.

    All in all, highly recommended for LMB fans, but not the starting place for those new to her work.

  • Rating Sometimes the journey is more important than the destination  Apr 23, 2008 (19 of 20 found this helpful)

    Dag and Fawn begin a long journey to the sea, which even well-travelled Dag has seen only once. Dag struggles to explain Lakewalker secrets to Farmers, though even his farmer bride doesn't reassure some stubborn, superstitious Farmers. Along their journey, Dag and Fawn collect company -- Fawn's pesky brother Whit, a dimwitted farmer boy, a couple of young Lakewalker patrollers, and a flatboat captain searching for her missing father. As Dag slowly heals from malice-inflicted injuries, he begins experimenting with new forms of groundwork, even though the Farmers fear his "magic" and the Lakewalkers disapprove of his revealing their secrets to Farmers. Dag and Fawn also hear rumors of disappearances along the river, leading their party into a dangerous adventure. Dag and Fawn make several passages -- a passage to the sea, a passage between cultures, a passage from patroller to maker -- as they try to open communication between Lakewalkers and Farmers.
    As usual in a Bujold book, even the minor charactes are well-drawn. The scene where Fawn explains sharing knives to White is not to be missed; I loved Whit's comparison of sharing knives to a Farmer practice. The story was satisfying, but it also left me eager to see what's on the horizon for Dag, Fawn, and their travelling companions.

  • Rating Floating Down the River  Jun 23, 2008 (15 of 17 found this helpful)

    Passage (2008) is the third fantasy novel of The Sharing Knife series, following Legacy. In the previous volume, Dag and Fawn were called before the camp council on charges pressed by his brother Dar. The council split on the decision, but Dag and Fawn left Hickory Lake Camp anyway. After the Malice incident in Greenspring, Dag wanted to find another way for the Lakewalkers to relate with the Farmers. Besides, their marriage has caused enough trouble with both Lakewalkers and Farmers.

    In this novel, Dag and Fawn go first to her family farm. The twins have moved off to stake their own claims and Whit has -- mostly -- quit his teasing of Fawn, so the visit goes well. At least until shortly before they leave, when Whit decides to go with them.

    They leave Fawn's pregnant mare at the farm and take two draft horses that Whit has trained. Naturally, Dag continues to ride Copperhead to protect the Farmers; no telling what that horse will do! The three ride off toward the Grace River.

    On the way, Dag and Fawn acquaint Whit with previously unshared knowledge about the Lakewalkers and Malices. Since Fawn knows Whit much better than Dag, she does more of the talking. Yet his confirmations make the discussion more real to Whit.

    Reaching Glassforge, Whit learns that his sister and brother-in-law are very well known in the town. They stay at the inn where the wounded had been treated and everybody knows Fawn. They even know that she has killed a Malice. Whit is quite amazed at his sister's fame.

    When it comes time to leave Glassforge, Whit changes his mind again. Instead to returning home, he decides to travel further with them. He does sell the horses, but gets a job with the firm that bought them. Now Whit and Fawn are riding the wagons to the river and Dag is still riding Copperhead.

    In this story, Dag and Fawn meet many people on the trail and boating down the river. Dag also meets a few Lakewalkers in the river camps. He and Fawn, with some help from Whit, disseminate more information about the Lakewalkers and gain more knowledge of the people themselves. Dag gets to perform a few more medical makings on the Farmer folks and starts to gain a reputation among them as a good healer.

    The Lakewalker authorities -- even the Patroller chiefs -- are very much against his activities. They order him to stop treating the wounded and sick Farmers and to cease his information campaign. But events on down the river turn out to require his healing and information.

    This tale shows that the Farmers can accept the Lakewalker activities as beneficial and understand the dangers of the Malices. Yet the efforts of Dag and Fawn are only a drop in the bucket. They also need to change the Lakewalkers themselves to gain full acceptance from the Farmers.

    The story is far from finished. Dag and Fawn will be back in Horizon, the fourth volume in this series. Enjoy!

    Highly recommended for Bujold fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of exotic societies, unusual magics, and marital romance.

    -Arthur W. Jordin

  • Rating The Story I Was Waiting For  May 14, 2008 (7 of 7 found this helpful)

    As other reviewers have said- this is not the place to start the series. Which I feel is unfortunate, because I was largely uninterested in the drippy romance that was the focal point of the first two volumes. However, Bujold did an excellent job of worldbuilding, and the underlying mystery of the world's history and magic kept me reading in the hope of finding out more.

    And in this book, we start to explore the capabilities of Dag's magic, the complex social problems that helped enliven the prior books are attacked (and prove to be *complex*, and not trivial), and we get to see more of Dag and Fawn's world. The 'main' plot's resolution is more or less obvious at the point it is introduced, but the problems of the lively set of secondary characters were more than sufficient to keep me entertained for the journey.

    If you were underwhelmed by the first two books, don't stop now. It just got better.

  • Rating Bujold Takes The Sharing Knife Series to a New Level  May 3, 2008 (9 of 10 found this helpful)

    I didn't write a review of the first two books in Bujold's The Sharing Knife series. I'm not sure why, but I don't review every book I read. I liked the first two books in this series but didn't love them. Passage, however, takes the series to a new level. I wouldn't recommend reading Passage without reading the first two, however. I don't think this volume would have the same impact and would be a bit difficult to follow without the background of the first two.

    Passage finds Fawn Bluefield and Dag Redwood Hickory returning to the Bluefield farm after Dag confronts his Lakewalker clan over his marriage to a farmer girl. Upon arrival they plan a trip to the sea. They take along Whit, Fawn's younger and at times troublesome brother and set off on the long journey. Along the way they pick up a collection of characters who are misfits, in some ways, making for quite an interesting trip along the river to the sea. Dag has a self-imposed mission to bring Lakewalkers and farmers into closer harmony by revealing the secrets of Lakewalker powers and discovers new and growing powers of his own. Dag wrestles with his new found abilities and tries to find ways to use them for the best. At the same time he takes Whit and two young Lakewalker patrollers under his wing.

    It is rare for a third book in a series scheduled to be four to be much more than filler. That certainly isn't the case here as Bujold takes the series to a new level with her exquisite ability to bring characters to life, her wonderful prose, and brilliant storytelling. I eagerly await Volume 4.

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