The Way into Chaos
The Way into Magic
The Way into Darkness
By Harry Connolly
The Great Way
is an epic Fantasy Trilogy by Harry Connolly. As the first two books end in
cliffhangers, and the narrative immediately picks up afterwards, it is useful
to look at them as volumes of a single story as opposed to related independent
books. Luckily, the story is very good.
The story opens in the capital of an empire similar to
Imperial Rome. Unlike the Romans, however, the Perdaini empire has a caste of scholars,
whose sorcerous power is derived from ‘gifts’ brought by God-like- or
alien-like beings. Once a generation, these beings visit, and this time, the
visit goes terribly wrong.
A plague of ravenous beasts descends on the capitol, slaying
the emperor and ravaging the city. The crown prince and a small portion of his
entourage escape, including the two very different POV characters: The first is Tejohn. An aging war hero who
won fame and renown hunting down rouge scholars and quelling rebellion, he is
the Prince’s bodyguard. The second is Cazia Freewell. The teenage daughter of a
rebellious lord, she is kept in the imperial court as a hostage, where she is
raised in the imperial culture and is studying to be a scholar. Despite their differences
and hatred of each other, the POV characters are united in their desire to
preserve the empire and protect the Prince, and they soon split up to run
separate quests for him. As the plague spreads and the story progresses,
however, the goal slips from maintaining the empire, to survival, of the
characters, of civilization, and even of humanity itself.
As a fantasy adventure, this is a fast-paced, hard-hitting,
and creative story. And I recommend it on that basis alone. But there are
additional attractions that the story has to people of science.
One of the main thematic arcs is the position of scholars in
society, and how their knowledge and power is handled and feared by society. This
is seen through the viewpoint of Cazia, as she grows up and sees the wider
world beyond the palace where he has been imprisoned, and also by Tejohn, who
confronts his scars from fighting rogue sorcerers as he comes to the
realization that they are needed in the fight to save humanity. Of course, this
tale of an ancient fantasy empire is told by a modern American writer, and is
prescient for scholars in the here and now. This becomes most clear in the
third book, where Cazia experiences what modern scientists refer to as Cosmic
Vertigo:
“I can look into the world.” The words barely made any
sense, and she was the one saying them. “I can look into the world and see its
parts.”
Just as clearly, she sees the fear, greed, and cunning that
the rest of society feels when they realize she- like modern atomic scientists-
can see and do things outside of the ordinary experience of most humans living
their day to day lives. As the story takes place in a collapsing civilization,
this is all the more important for all of us to appreciate.
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