The Amber
Chronicles Book 4
I’ve been away from the pages of The Distractible Reader for
far too long. I’d been away from the Amber Chronicles for too long as well.
Luckily, Zelazny and Corwin of Amber, his narrator, are happy to recap and
remind us of what has gone before as we plunge into the next volume.
There is no time lost, however, between the end of
Sign of the Unicorn and the beginning of
The Hand of Oberon. This installment
in the adventure is just as packed with intrigue and action as the previous
books. Corwin is still trying to figure out how to save his beloved homeland
from terrorizing enemies arriving via a path known as the black road. Of course
he also has to deal with the other members of his monumentally untrustworthy
family, some of whom are plotting against him personally but also have much
greater and more destructive plans. In addition to dangerous, life-threatening
action complete with magic
The Hand of
Oberon also gives us (as well as the narrator) some valuable clues as to
the nature of Amber, how it might have been created, and what its fate might be
if the wrong people have access to that information.
While the structure, foundation and magic of Amber are,
well, totally cool, the depth of the characters of the Amber Chronicles make it
even more pleasurable reading. We see each character skewed at least slightly
from Corwin’s point of view, but by this time in the series I for one have come
to find Corwin an honest narrator if not exactly a model of trustworthiness to
the other players in this big game. We are given almost enough information to
draw our own conclusions about these colorful people, but are also guided in
our analysis by the characters who give us their opinions without being allowed
to forget that sometimes, the antagonists really are just insane.
I had put this book down for a while when I was about
halfway through (no excuse, just distractible), so I feared I had missed
something when I neared the end of the book and still did not know why it was
given its title. It isn’t until just the end that its meaning became clear with
a bit of a twist, although I’d bet that if I reread the book, I’d find a clue
or two. The Hand of Oberon was yet
another fun Amber book, and I think I’ll dive into Book Five as soon as I can.
You might also like
Sign of the Unicorn by Roger Zelazny
Coming soon:
Death Masks (Book 5 of the Dresden Files) by Jim Butcher
A Year of Books I Should Have Read by Now