Stealing the Elf-King's Roses

by Diane Duane

Paperback, 2002

Status

Available

Call number

Fic SF Duane

Publication

Warner Books (2002), Mass Market Paperback, 416 pages

Description

A murder reveals a deadly plot against Elves, particurally the highest members of the Alfheim government, and Lee Enfiled, and her fayhound partner Gelert must infiltrate Alfheim to discover the truth.

User reviews

LibraryThing member wyvernfriend
Theres a murder of an elf and LA prosecutor, sleuth and forenisc Ianthanomancer Lee Enfield; with her partner Gelert whose a Fayhound, are investigating but there's more to this murder than is obvious.
LibraryThing member jjmcgaffey
Fun book - a lot of echoes of her other work, including the various Wizards series and the Door series. But also a neat new world (worlds) - even if she does break it by the end of the book. I don't know if she'll write any more in that universe - it might be fun to read. As long as it wasn't
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another saving-the-universe story! I'd like to read something simpler, like maybe just a police-procedural mystery with fayhounds and the Sight and Justice personified taking a hand - that's how this one starts out and then takes a sharp right and goes straight up into fireworks.
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LibraryThing member fiveforsilver
My first non-Young Wizards book by DD. Based on the title, I expected it to be more fantasy related, but I should have known better. It's actually an SF book. It was...a pretty good book, but it didn't grab me the way the YW books do. I will probably reread it some day.
LibraryThing member cmbohn
talking cats! that work magic! couldn't handle this. Plus it's confusing. Something about politics and magic and stuff.
LibraryThing member Silvernfire
This is a book to read if you like world-building. In this novel, traveling between dimensions is commonplace, and five alternative Earths (with a recently-discovered sixth Earth about to join in) have formed tight business and cultural ties—mostly. On one of these worlds, much like our Earth
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except for technological differences and the use of psychic powers in the judicial system, Lee Enfield and her business partner Gelert, a fayhound, investigate the murder of an Alfen (Elf). They end up traveling to Alfheim, the most secretive and powerful of the worlds, and naturally things get more complicated and go off in a totally different direction than expected.

Generally I liked the book, but it seemed like there was too much crammed into it, as though the author sensed she only had one shot at writing a story in this universe and wanted to cover as much as she could. So everything felt a little short-changed. Sometimes I had trouble following the plot, especially at the end. Sometimes I thought the characters weren't as developed as they might have been. And even though much of the book is spent describing this universe, I felt like we'd barely gotten into it. But it was an entertaining read and it did keep me up late ("I'll just finish this chapter...!"). It's worth reading for its universe alone, and luckily it offers more than that.
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LibraryThing member wealhtheowwylfing
A much more mature novel than it looks/sounds. The main character, a plain middle-aged woman investigating increased murders of elves across the worlds, seeks ever deeper into a plot that just gets brouder and more interesting as you go.
LibraryThing member jjmcgaffey
I've read the originally-published version a couple times; this one doesn't have enormous differences (I don't think - it's been a while since my last reread). There are noticeable differences in the ending, I'm pretty sure - I recall being rather confused before, now it's clearer what's
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happening.
Aside from that - still a great story, and a fascinating world(s). A multiverse of Earths, with differences lesser and (much) greater - in a known and standard relationship with each other. The one most like ours, where our hero(ine) lives, has a few differences - like Justice Herself manifesting in court to deal judgement to an offender, after the evidence for guilt or innocence is presented. Also intelligent wolves (more or less - feyhounds, actually) - one of them is the hero's partner.
The book starts out as a detective procedural - the end of one case and the beginning of another, the murder of an Alfen (Elf - from one of the other Earths) local employee. And then (as I said in my other review) it takes a sharp right turn and goes up in fireworks. Cross-world investigation, an attempted coup against the Elf-King, and eventually, saving the universe (well, it is a Duane, after all). Love it. I'd still like to read something a trifle more mundane in this multiverse - less saving the world, more just managing life across worlds and cultures.
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LibraryThing member ashleytylerjohn
Didn't finish it--in truth, barely started it (Kindle said I was 12% in when I abandoned it).

I used to feel it was unfair to judge a book if I hadn't slogged all the way through, but if, say, half the audience can't finish a book, isn't that worth knowing about it?

I love mysteries, I love
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fantasies, I love Thraxas, for example, or City of Stairs, so I thought this would be right up my alley. Instead of welcoming me in, however, it read like Volume 12 of some long-established series where it would only make sense for those who kept up with Volumes 1 through 11. (And I say this as someone who actually loves it when the author withholds a bit--think Gene Wolfe, for example--but this book did not have that kind of tone, the "bear with me, enjoy the evocative writing, and eventually you will be rewarded" tone. )

The style was straightforward, and I'm getting picky in my old age. If you're going to confuse me by dropping me into something without explanation, your prose had better sing! But Duane's prose was, well, prosaic.

And I still haven't read the sequel(s) to The Hollow Kingdom yet, or any of Thackeray besides Vanity Fair, so the time I spent is a sunk cost and I can live with that and move on to something better.
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LibraryThing member LisCarey
This is not an especially easy book to describe.

The cosmological background is that there are multiple alternate Earths, six of which currently have regular communication and trade with each other. A seventh has just been discovered as the story opens, and is subsequently revealed to be our own.
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One of these worlds, Alfheim, is the source of the gating technology that makes intercontinuum travel and trade possible, and of the fairy gold that makes gating technology practical and affordable. The setting of this story, or at least part of it, is an alternate Los Angeles, mostly referred to as Ellay. The legal system in Ellay is in some respects similar to that existing in the UK in our world, and in some respects, really different. In our UK, the magistrate, prosecuting and defending attorneys, and the jury do not invoke the actual personification of Justice, who determines actual guilt and imposes a suitable sentence, such as turning a nasty little weasel of a con artist into a human-sized weasel. Nor are the prosecuting and the defending attorneys all psychoforensicists, able to know whether suspects and witness a re telling the truth, or replay the events at the scene of a murder from the victim's viewpoint.

You might think that these abilities would make solving a crime child's play. It's not. You still have to have enough evidence to convince the jury and Justice that the accused is guilty, and this is harder to do if the events as you discover them involve impossible things happening, such as people appearing and disappearing into thin air without benefit of a worldgate.

This story is, or starts off as, a murder mystery. The murder takes place in the alternate world called Earth, in the city of Ellay, and the victim is an elf, or what is called an elf. Omren dil'Sorden is one of the Alfen, a native of the alternate Earth called Alfheim. At the time of his murder, dil'Sorden was a very successful and valuable employee in the R&D division of ExTel, a telecom multinational.

In the case of dil'Sorden's murder, our investigators and intended prosecuting attorneys are Lee Enfield and her partner Gelart. Gelart is a fayhound, and looks rather like a white, frizzy-haired wolfhound--Irish or Russian isn't specified, but the size sounds like an Irish wolfhound. It's mentioned a couple of times that the fayhounds were originally native to Alfheim, as are the Alfen, but it's implied that there are no longer any fayhounds in Alfheim. Why this should be is not further explicated here, and this looks deliberate rather than careless--one of several things suggesting that this may be intended as the first of a series.

As implied above, Lee and Gelart's psychoforensic examination of the scene of dil'Sorden's murder turns up the apparent appearance and then disapearance of a person, an elf, who watches the murder, appears to be satisfied with the result, and then steps through something that isn't there, and is not seen again.

Dil'Sorden's employer, ExTel, is applying a startling amount of pressure to get this murder "cleaned up" quickly--with odd hints that this doesn't necessarily mean "solved" in any greater sense than getting the immediate gunman. Then, in rapid succession, there's anattempt on Lee's life, she gets wind of a Five-Geneva report that reveals a surprisingly high, and increasing, rate of murder of Alfen living and working in worlds other than Alfheim, and she gets an anonymous, probably Alfen, call, suggesting that she should be looking for an opportunity to "leave town", and also to acquire--illegally, because it couldn't be done any other way--one of the Elf-King's roses, as this could have interesting and useful effects on technology currently causing her a lot of trouble.

The Elf-King's roses are, as far as she can determine, entirely mythical.

The Five-Geneva report is released, the fecal matter hits the air-recirculating device, and Ellay's politically ambitious DA gets Lee and Gelart appointed to the UN&ME (United Nations and Multinational Entities) commission that's being sent to Alfheim to investigate the strange Alfen murder rate and the evidence that it's related to Alfen organized crime. Dil'Sorden's murder rapidly becomes the least of their troubles, as they get caught up in an Alfen power struggle with a garnish of a planned multinational invasion of Alfheim, with the survival of all the worlds at stake.

That the Alfen know a great deal more about worldgating than they've ever shared or hinted at is, of course, not even a surprise, by the time Lee and Gelart start to figure out the Alfen factions involved.

I haven't really done justice to this book; it's a lot of fun. I'd be happy to see more of Lee and Gelart, at least as long as they remain in mass market paperback.
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LibraryThing member catseyegreen
In an alternate universe, Lee and Gelert are a detective team tasked with finding the murderer of an Alf, a visitor from yet another universe. There are 5 universes that travel between themselves. The Alf universe is the most powerful because it controls the supply of fairy gold which is the
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substance that allows this travel. As they begin to research their case they uncover a huge conspiracy.
Off to a slow start but it got more interesting toward the end.
read 11/8/2023
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LibraryThing member quondame
Some really interesting world building was supported by interesting characters with a strong and empathetic main character, but the pacing was stuttering, and the some sections seemed overly drawn out - and the big nope - an overheard conversation that was in the mc's language when it shouldn't
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have been and was overfull of explanations that would have been unnecessary to the speakers. The actions resulting from that conversation could have been much more naturally inspired. And I feel that 3* is generous for the amount of time I lost to this book.
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Awards

Chesley Award (Nominee — 2003)

Language

Physical description

416 p.; 6.78 inches

ISBN

0446609838 / 9780446609838

DDC/MDS

Fic SF Duane

Rating

½ (80 ratings; 3.6)
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