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Mercedes Lackey


 

Mercedes Lackey (born June 24, 1950) (also known as Misty Lackey) is a prolific American author of fantasy novels. Many of her novels and trilogies are interlinked and set in the world of Velgarth, mostly in and around the country of Valdemar. Her Valdemar novels form a complex tapestry of interaction between human and non-human protagonists with many different cultures and social mores. There is a prominent theme of tolerance throughout, notably in the relative prominence of homosexual characters and the ethos of Valdemar: "There is no one, true way".

Published Works

Velgarth

Some of the trilogies follow on chronologically from each other.

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Others are set a considerable number of years apart from the others.

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Overall the books span some 3000 years of history.

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There is a significant gap in the middle which might some day be filled.

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However Lackey has recently (October 2003) announced that she is taking a break from writing Velgarth books.

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Heralds of Valdemar

This set consists of the original trilogy,

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the very first Valdemar books published,

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and a prequel trilogy,

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the most recent.

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  • Prequels
  • These centre on the Weaponsmaster Alberich (in the first two books) and the thief Skif (in the third book), telling the stories of their not-entirely-voluntary enrolments as Heralds.

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  • Exile's Honor
  • Exile's Valor
  • Take a Thief
  • The original trilogy
  • These centre on the character Talia, from her first encounter with the Heralds to becoming the Queen's Own Herald.

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  • Arrows of the Queen
  • Arrow's Flight
  • Arrow's Fall

The Mage Winds

These follow on from the original Heralds of Valdemar trilogy,

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centering on Princess Elspeth completing her transformation from "the Brat" to a fully-fledged Herald. Secondary protaganists include Skif and a new character Darkwind.

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The Mage Storms

These follow on again, centering on the characters Karal and An'desha.

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The Owl Mage

These take place some time later,

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centering on the character Darian.

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The Last Herald Mage

These occur some centuries before the Heralds of Valdemar books,

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telling the life story of Vanyel Ashkevron;

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by the time of the "later" books he has become legend,

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thus explaining some of the small inconsistencies.

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Vows and Honor

  • The Oathbound (ISBN 0-88677-285-0), 1988
  • Oathbreakers (ISBN 0-88677-319-9), 1989
  • Oathblood (ISBN 0-88677-773-9), 1998
  • These precede the Heralds of Valdemar books, centering on the characters Tarma and Kethry, These characters appeared first in Marion Zimmer Bradley's Sword and Sorceress series) and were revisited in subsequent short stories. Two of these short stories are woven into the Vows and Honor books as part of a longer narrative. The third volume is made up entirely of short stories in place of a longer narrative; with its publication, all the Tarma and Kethryn stories were available together. The original Vows and Honor pair of books were linked together with By the Sword (published long before Oathblood) as a trilogy.

    Related Topics:
    Marion Zimmer Bradley - Sword and Sorceress series

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    In the books, Tarma is a sword-wielding Shin'a'in tribeswoman. Kethry is a magic-user who carries a sword with unusual properties. The nature of this sword, Need, is explored in later series set in Valdemar. At the time of the Vows and Honor books, all that is known is that it is magic, protects female bearers, and can pressurise its owner into assisting other women. The overarching goal for the two women is to accumulate resources enough to regenerate Tarma's almost-destroyed tribe. As the titles of the books suggest, emphasis is laid on the importance and consequences of oaths in at least one story from each book. The setting of the books is generally in the lands south of Valdemar such as Rethwellan, although there is a brief sojourn in Valdemar in Oathbreakers. Despite limited time in Valdemar, there were references in the first two Vows and Honor books to the Companions of Valdemar which laid early hints to their nature. The introduction of a four-fold deity (Tarma's Goddess) was something of a novel idea at the time of publication.

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Kerowyn's Tale

This is a stand-alone novel which connects the Vows & Honor sub-series to the Heralds and other trilogies; it introduces the character Kerowyn who features therein. Kerowyn is the granddaughter of Kethry from the Vows and Honor sub-series.

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The Mage Wars

These are set in pre-history, some 2000-3000 years earlier.

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They describe the events which set off The Mage Storms.

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Miscellaneous

This is a stand-alone novel, set somewhere between The Last Herald Mage and the Heralds books; it describes another legendary character referred to in the latter, Lavan Firestorm.

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Short Story Collections

Reference

Elves on the Road universe

Bedlam's Bard

Diana Tregarde

  • Burning Water (1989)
  • Children of the Night (1990)
  • Jinx High (1991)
  • These books are set in the same real world as the SERRAted Edge books: that is, a real world with levinbolts and elves who drive racing cars. At least one character (Tannim) is seen in both sets of books. The main character, Diana Tregarde, is an American Wiccan witch who has access to more magical power than many by virtue of her position as a Guardian, but who is required to give her help when someone asks it of her. Her magical abilities do not pay the bills, however, and Diana is a genre (romance) novelist in her day job. In the stories, she must protect others from angry deities (Burning Water), vampires (Children of the Night), and a sorceress who intends to remain eternally young (Jinx High). The books were published under Tor's horror imprint rather than as fantasy. At the time of publication, positive depictions of what Wiccans and, more generally, neopagans believed and did were rare. In the mid-nineties, Lackey's books generally and these three particularly were regularly cited as examples of pagan-friendly fiction. (http://groups-beta.google.com/group/alt.pagan/msg/459610003c7d496e?hl=en& (1992), http://groups-beta.google.com/group/alt.pagan/msg/0a781ed2afea5f82?hl=en& (1995)) Lackey has written that she has no plans for further books in the series because they did not sell well (and not, as some fans apparently believed, because she had come under pressure for stumbling "too close to the truth" of some supernatural conspiracy); nonetheless, she incorporated several elements of the Guardian mythos, including the apartment building where Diana lived, into later books in her Bedlam's Bard series.

    Related Topics:
    American - Wiccan - Magical power - Genre - Romance - Angry deities - Vampires - Horror - Neopagans - Conspiracy

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    The character Diana Tregarde first appeared in two short stories, "Satanic, Versus..." and "Nightside", which were originally written for inclusion in the ' roleplaying game and subsequently featured in the short story collection Werehunter (1999). "Satanic, Versus..." is a humorous cautionary tale that demonstrates just what can happen when people who don't quite understand magic meddle with it, whereas "Nightside" is a preliminary version of what later became the novel Children of the Night.

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    The game Bureau 13 concerned a secret government agency tasked with investigating the supernatural. Presumably any original connection to the game's continuity has been rendered apocryphal by the expansion to novel form. Nonetheless, perhaps it is not entirely coincidental that a similar agency appears as an antagonist in a later Bedlam's Bard book.

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The Serrated Edge

  • Born To Run (1992) with Larry Dixon
  • Wheels of Fire (1992) with Mark Shepherd
  • When the Bough Breaks (1993) with Holly Lisle
  • Chrome Circle (1994) with Larry Dixon
  • Elvendude (1994) by Mark Shepherd
  • Spiritride (1997) by Mark Shepherd
  • Lazerwarz (1999) by Mark Shepherd
  • This Scepter'd Isle (2004) with Roberta Gellis (prequel)
  • Stoned Souls with Josepha Sherman
  • Ill Met by Moonlight (2005) with Roberta Gellis (prequel)
  • Born to Run and Chrome Circle were incorporated into an omnibus called The Chrome Borne. Wheels of Fire and When the Bough Breaks were incorporated into an omnibus called The Otherworld. The books were paired off by thematic content rather than order; thus readers wishing to read the series in chronological order would be advised to read the first half of The Chrome Borne, all of The Otherworld, and then the latter half of The Chrome Borne.

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    Mark Shepherd's solo books in this series are only thinly connected to the other books, and might more properly be considered a separate series of their own.

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    This Scepter'd Isle and Ill Met by Moonlight are a prequel series set several hundred years prior to the other books in the series. The first printing of This Scepter'd Isles first Baen hardcover edition included a bound-in CDROM containing ebook editions of that as well as many other works by Lackey and other authors. As with Baen's other bound-in CDs, this CD included blanket permission to copy and share its contents noncommercially; thus it may be found freely circulating in peer-to-peer networks, as well as hosted on the world-wide web.

    Related Topics:
    Baen - CDROM - Ebook - Peer-to-peer

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The Halfblood Chronicles

with Andre Norton

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The Elemental Masters

Set in an alternate universe where magic is real, and Elemental Masters control the powers of Fire, Water, Air, and Earth?in parts of the world at least. These stories are based loosely?sometimes very loosely?upon various fairy tales.

Related Topics:
Alternate universe - Fairy tale

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Fairy Tale

Free Bards universe

Bardic Voices

  • The Lark and the Wren (1992)
  • The Robin and the Kestrel (1994)
  • The Eagle and the Nightingales (1996)
  • Four and Twenty Blackbirds (1997,ISBN 0-671-87853-0)
  • The Free Bards had their genesis in the story "Fiddler Fair", originally written for an Andre Norton shared-world anthology entitled Magic in Ithkar. The Ithkar series did not continue after its second volume, so Lackey rewrote, changed, and expanded the story into a setting of its own in The Lark and the Wren. "Fiddler Fair" may be found in the Mercedes Lackey short-story collection that is also entitled Fiddler Fair.

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Bardic Choices

The Dragon Jousters

Heirs of Alexandria

Obsidian Trilogy

Bard's Tale universe

~ Table of Content ~

Introduction
Theiapolis People!
Related writers
Opposition
Published Works
External links
Contact Mercedes Lackey
Goodies & Collectibles
Posters & Prints

 

 

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