Brightly burning

by Mercedes Lackey

2001

Publication

Daw, c2000.

Collection

Status

Available

Description

Fantasy. Fiction. Romance. Historical Fiction. HTML: His name is Lavan Firestorm, a young man blessed�??and cursed�??with a special talent for firestarting. His legend has haunted the darkest corners of Valdemar, yet the truth has never been told. Here, at last, is his story

User reviews

LibraryThing member jjmcgaffey
This is probably the most depressing Valdemar story there is, and certainly the most depressing book that I actually enjoy. Lan suffers a lot, from a lot of directions - the bullies, his family, his own expectations of himself, what duty drives him to do, the emotions he has to call up to work his
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Gift - there's very little respite for him, and his bond to Kalira, while it relieves some of the pressures, has its own drawbacks. For all of Pol's hopes, it was probably the best ending he could have had - the dragon was getting stronger, I think. But I end the book in tears every single time. At the same time, it's an extremely rich story, it adds another layer to my understanding of Heralds, it shows yet another new level of Valdemar society (wealthy merchants and Guildmasters, this time), and I enjoy reading it despite the depressing situation. Very rich, and worth it.
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LibraryThing member PhoebeReading
I add my review of Mercedes Lackey's Brightly Burning belatedly and with some reluctance. Since March 2008, when I started posting goodreads reviews of every book I completed, my reading habits have improved--I finish more books these days, and those that I don't finish, I totally abandon with
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little guilt. Brightly Burning is the first novel to fall somewhere in between: I skimmed the last third.It starts with promise, though to be fair it's the same promise of every Mercedes Lackey book. The teenage protagonist, Lavan "Lan" Chitward has been forced to move to the big city by his social climbing parents. What's worse, Lan--a moody loner used to wandering the forest--is made to go to a school for wealthy children where bullying is the order of the day. At school, the torment of his peers slowly releases Lan's dark side, his pyrokinetic powers that he cannot control.Lackey spends a lot of time developing the beginning of the story. The awakening of Lan's powers is vividly and slowly described. Though I didn't find him a terribly sympathetic character (he's a bit of a sullen brat), the tension here was well-done and enough to power the story forwards.But it all fell apart for me when Lan is chosen by a companion to become a Herald of Valdemar.Sure, I expected it--after all, Lan is a legendary character mentioned in passing in the very first Valdemar novel. But after his choosing, the story becomes terribly well-worn. Things seem to just happen to Lan--he's not in control of his powers, but his companion keeps them conveniently dampened so that Lan can collect a coterie of fairly flat friends. There is a very undeveloped love triangle featuring Lan, a friend, and Lan's horse. No, I'm not kidding.And that was, actually, part of my problem with this story. Lan and his horse are supposed to be soulmates. Sure, this is an uncomfortable idea, and I hate to suggest bestiality, but there's something bizarre about being in a completely chaste but supposedly perfectly fulfilling relationship. With a talking horse.Without really exploring any of this, or Lan's powers, Misty rushes us off to war. The military plotline is as terrifically undeveloped and unheralded (heh) as everything that happened to Lan at the Collegium. I felt unmoved by the time the tragic, but predictable, ending came around, but to be fair, I'd been skimming for at least a hundred pages.
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LibraryThing member Black_samvara
The tragic story of Lavan Firestorm.

Not as tear-stricken as the Last Herald-Mage which is a Good Thing.
LibraryThing member miss_blue664
What do you say about this book? It was truely a wonderful read. The plot was a little slow on the get go, but once it started it was gone. I think everybody can connect with Lavan, that what makes the story so wonderful. You feel his pain and understand his situation. I adored Kalira's character
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as well as Lavans. Their growth as individuals and as a team was well written. Very much the book to re-read.
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LibraryThing member jshillingford
This is one of my favorite entries in the Valdemar Saga. I guess I'm just a sucker for tragedy and self-sacrifice. Lavan Firestorm is a Herald with a powerful, and dangerous talent. Many people are afraid of him. The Heralds aren't sure what to do with him. If he could control his power he would be
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a great asset, but he could also destroy the people he cares about. When a traitorous plot threatens the kingdom, Lavan may be the only hope. Lavan is a great characters, and the familiar world of Valdemar a comfortable back drop. Highly recommended!
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LibraryThing member booknutzz
I can never seem to put these down once I start and end up reading the whole series again. There like that Lays commercial - "You can't read just one". Mercedes Lackey captures you attention and keeps it. You want to find out more about her characters. They come alive and become friends who you
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want to know more about.
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LibraryThing member goldnyght
This is one of my favorite Valdemar books. Lavan is a great character, and, as usual, Lackey did a wonderful job building the history of Valdemar
LibraryThing member LisaMaria_C
If you've never read Lackey or her Valdemar books, this wouldn't be the place I'd start. The first published is the Heralds of Valdemar trilogy beginning with Arrows of the Queen, and the earliest chronologically, and in my opinion her best, is the Last Herald's Mage series beginning with Magic's
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Pawn.

Chronologically, this book is set between those two trilogies, and fleshes out a mention of Lavan Firestorm in the first trilogy. The book starts out in a way typical for Lackey's books, with a young man misunderstood by his family who finds his destiny when he's "chosen" by a Companion (magical creature shaped like a horse) and thus enters the ranks of the Heralds.

If you've read others of those Valdemar books and love them, you'll probably enjoy Brightly Burning, which certainly is eminently readable, well-paced, and as imaginative as any, but this book and the character of Lavan just didn't for me have the pull and ability to move me the way Talia and Vanyel of her first two sets of books set in Valdemar.
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LibraryThing member puckrobin
Definitely not one of my favourite Heralds or one of my favourite tales of Valdemar. Due to the fact that I found it difficult to care about the lead character, I found it equally difficult to care what happened to him, although I think it was intended that the reader feel strongly for the boy on
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the basis of his having so little control over his life and his gift. Perhaps Lackey hoped that readers would sympathize with the character's choices and understand his attitude and frustrations, but mostly, I just found it off putting. That being said, I have kept the book and found it of interest in so far as providing some insight into the history of Valdemar.
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LibraryThing member zsms
One of her worst books.
LibraryThing member JeremyPreacher
In a way, a lot of the Valdemar books are boarding-school books. This is the only one that involves an actual school, though. The first third of the book is as much a bullying-revenge fantasy as anything, although I would very much not recommend it solely for that, as Lavan Firestorm is perhaps the
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most truly tragic character in a long line of tragic characters of Valdemar.

Beyond the actual arc, it's a charming book filled with Lackey's usual charming supporting cast. There's enough real drama to keep it moving - even the boarding school bullying is genuinely scary - and enough mundane detail to establish the characters involved. The last third is a war story, and it does an excellent job of establishing both the tragedy inherent in heroism and, perhaps surprisingly, of parenting.

I do get a little annoyed at books where the main character is a "poor little rich kid," tremendously privileged but with that privilege completely ignored in favor of the real but not all that critical disadvantages of, say, having wealthy, influential parents and living in the fashionable part of town. Lackey seems to trend in that direction (and when she goes the other way she goes a touch overboard) and it bugs me here more than it does when the privilege involved is that of feudal nobility, but that may be my personal peeve.

I read Brightly Burning before any other Valdemar book, and it was rather an odd introduction to the world - it's a standalone novel (perhaps moreso than any other,) but it's definitely aimed at the dedicated Valdemar reader and I liked it much better after having a better grip on the universe. It holds up tolerably well - it'd probably be better off classified as YA material, but it's solid YA material.
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LibraryThing member JohnFair
Lavan, the hero of this story, is a fairly typical Lackey hero in that he's the 'runt of the litter', ignored by his family as he doesn't want to go into the family trade but seems content to lay about the family home. With his mother as guikldmaster, though, this doesn't go down well with the
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parents and they arrange for him to start classes at a school set up to educate the offspring of the trademen. This school makes Nicholas Nickleby's Dootheboys Hall look like a holiday camp. Of course, Lavan is harbouring a singular Talent - firestarting, and when the bullying goes too far, he displays this Talent in all its horrifying glory. Accepted as a Herald Lavan finds a s/ort of peace but Valdemar is facing a particularly rampant Karse and only Lavan can stop the Karsites overwhelming Valdemar.

In places this book comes out as quite viscious in ways that earlier Valdemar books haven't but as its also one of the later books in the series, written just after the 9/11 attacks on the US so Lackey was caught up in the fervour of the moment although the dedication is for those who missed the New Millennium celebrations as they watched computer systems handle the change over with barely a hitch :-)
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LibraryThing member rivkat
Lan is a merchant’s child savagely abused at the school his unsympathetic parents send him to; then during a bullying incident his Gift explodes with fatal fury. His Companion can control his fire, but there’s not much time for him to master his Gift because Karse is about to invade, and he’s
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their best hope of fighting them off. This one does have high stakes and a bunch of losses.
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Language

Original language

English

ISBN

0886779898 / 9780886779894

Original publication date

2000

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