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The Heritage Of Hastur (1984)

The Heritage of Hastur (1984)

Book Info

Genre
Series
Rating
4 of 5 Votes: 4
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ISBN
0879979674 (ISBN13: 9780879979676)
Language
English
Publisher
daw

About book The Heritage Of Hastur (1984)

The Heritage of Hastur (pub. 1975) and its immediate sequel, Sharra's Exile (pub. 1981) are in some ways the heart of the Darkovan cycle - they mark the end of the Comyn and the sociopolitical structure of Darkover as it was and, as Regis Hastur comes into his own, the beginnings of a new Darkover (which would be penned, not by Bradley, but by her successors Adrienne Martine-Barnes and Deborah J. Ross from outlines and notes).The Heritage of Hastur details the events surrounding Regis' coming of age, amid the unleashing of Sharra, the powerful matrix we saw before in The Winds of Darkover. It is also a key part of the ongoing conversation about the position of Darkover within the Terran Empire. In all these strands of the narrative, the one common theme is responsibility for and abuse of power. In a sense, the true heritage of Hastur - and all Comyn are called the children of Hastur - is a heritage of extreme privilege and power, and its potential for abuse, as much as it is a heritage of responsibility. As Danvan Hastur acknowledges, "In the far-back days, we were given power and privilege because we served our people, not because we ruled them. Then we began to believe we had these powers and privileges because of some innate superiority in ourselves, as if having laran made us so much better than other people that we could do exactly as we pleased."As the novel opens, relations between Terrans and Darkovans have once more grown tense, and the key issue is the Compact - an agreement banning all long-distance weapons that holds sway throughout the six lowland Domains. The Empire has technically agreed not to allow such weapons to be taken out of the Terran Zone in Thendara, but Terran officials do not really take the agreement seriously, or enforce it rigorously, and they have allowed the sale of range weapons in Alderan territory - realising that the compact exists to protect all Darkovans from the devastating matrix weapons - like Sharra. Again, this conflict adds to the themes of responsibility, power and abuse that inform all the narrative strands of the novel. This narrative focuses on two young men - Regis Hastur and Lewis Alton - whose circumstances and experiences are in some ways counterpointed, but in other ways parallel. Regis is the grandson of Danvan Hastur (and great-grandson of Lorill Hastur), heir to the most powerful family on Darkover, the hereditary Regents of the Crown - a vital role, as many of the Elhalyn, hereditary Kings of Darkover, have been incompetent or even mad in recent generations. But Regis doesn't want to be the de-facto ruler of Darkover, he longs for the stars. Unlike the Comyn he is destined to lead, he appears to be almost completely lacking in laran - testing indicates he has the potential, but that it has been blocked from normal development.Lew Alton is also the heir to a powerful Domain, but unlike Regis, he has had to fight to be recognised. He is the son of Kennard Alton (last seen as a boy in Star of Danger) and Elaine Montray, who is half Terran, half Darkovan, but of the outcast Aldaran Domain, who Kennard met and fell in love with on Earth. Although Kennard married Elaine di catenas - the most formal style of marriage - the Comyn refused to acknowledge his marriage and Lew has always been treated by most as a bastard, carrying both the barbarian blood of the Terrans and the traitor's blood of the Aldarans. In order to have his son declared as his heir, Kennard was forced to prove before witnesses that Lew carried the Alton Gift of forced rapport by forcing rapport on him - an act that might have killed Lew if he did not in fact have the gift. Only in the Towers, where Lew proved to be a powerful and skilled matrix technician, has he felt truly welcome, although he has won some degree of acceptance among the Guards, where he serves as an officer and his father's second - the Altons being the hereditary commanders of the Guard. The events of the novel do in fact begin in the Guard, where Regis is beginning his duties as a cadet, where Kennard is Commander and both Lew and Kennard's cousin and childhood friend Dyan Ardais - the Lord of that Domain - are officers, as is Regis' brother-in-law (and Lew's cousin) Gabriel Lanart-Hastur. Also in his first year as a cadet is Danilo Syrtis, son of a minor Comyn house whose older brother was paxman and sword brother to Regis' father - both of whom were killed by bandits carrying Terran weapons. As new cadets, Regis and Danilo initially become friends, but are driven apart by the actions of Dyan. As cadet master, he has the power to make any cadet's life a living hell, and when Danilo refuses his sexual advances, Dyan uses not only his official power but also his laran to torment the young man. At the same time, Dyan attempts a gentle seduction of Regis - the difference in his approach to the two being that he sees Regis as a social equal and Danilo as a social inferior. Before too long, Danilo has rejected Regis' friendship and, driven to desperation by Dyan's action, draws a knife on Dyan and is sent home in disgrace. Meanwhile, Kennard has asked Lew to travel to Aldaran to investigate the situation with respect to Terran weapons there, under the pretext of visiting his Lord Kermiac and his other Alderan kinfolk. When Lew, who has seen Dyan in action before, witnesses the public disgrace of Danilo and senses what was behind Danilo's reaction, goes to Kennard in protest, his father will not listen to him. Lew leaves for Aldaran, but with a heart filled with anger and disgust at the abuses of power he has witnessed. Arriving at Castle Alderan he is welcomed into the family as the grandson of Kermiac's sister Meriel. Here he meets his cousin, Kermiac's son Beltran, Kermiac's wards, Thyra, Marjorie and Rafe Scott, and the mysterious Raymon Kadarin, and is drawn into their plan to recreate the old pre-Compact matrix sciences, using the Sharra matrix. As he works with Kadarin and the others, training them to be a working circle, he and Marjorie begin to fall in love, despite the fact that Lew has determined that Marjorie is the one best suited to serve as the circle's Keeper.Regis, having completed his first year of training, travels to visit his sister; en route, he stops at Danilo's home, where the two renew their friendship, and Regis, learning what really happened to him, swears to make it right. On his return to Thendara, despite being ill with threshold sickness, a malady that often strikes telepaths whose laran has awakened, he confronts first his grandfather and then Kennard with the knowledge of Dyan's abuse. Kennard, reading his mind and the images he carries from Danilo's mind, is shocked, but accepts Dyan's guilt. He also realises that Danilo is a catalyst telepath, a rare gift thought to be extinct, and contact with him can stimulate latent laran - and that contact with Danilo is what has woken Regis' powers. With the promise that justice will be done, Regis returns to Syrtis with Gabriel who is to take Regis to Neskaya for laran training and then bring Danilo back to Thendara, but they discover that Danilo has been kidnapped by the Aldarans. Gabriel returns to Thendara to report the crime. Regis promises to wait for Gabriel at his seat in Edelweiss, but instead, he pauses long enough to name Gabriel and Javanne's youngest son his heir, and sets out to find Danilo.In Alderan, Lew is horrified when he learns that Beltran has kidnapped Danilo, particularly since he himself, having guessed Danilo's gift, had speculated about asking Danilo to join their circle and use his gift to help more latent telepaths find their powers. Kermiac chastises Beltran, and when Regis arrives, assures him that both he and Danilo are guests under his roof and will come to no harm, and will be allowed to leave when the weather is better. Lew comes to the realisation that working with Sharra is corrupting all of them, awakening lust for power and dulling their consciences, he decides that they must return Sharra to the forge folk and find another way to bring about their goals. But when Kermiac dies suddenly, Beltran imprisons Regis and Danilo, and tries to force Lew to continue working with the Sharra circle. Marjorie rescues the three captives, and they flee Aldaran Castle. Lew and Marjorie set out to bring word of the Sharra circle to Arilinn, while Regis and Danilo head toward Thendara. Lew and Marjorie are recaptured, and Lew is drugged and, now controlled by Kadarin, returns to the Sharra circle. As Sharra rages, destroying the city of Caer Donn and the Terran Spaceport there, telepaths across Darkover feel the impact, and a force is sent from Thendara to stop the fires, no matter what. Regis and Danilo meet the party, led by Kennard and Dyan, on the road, and head back with them toward Alderan.Marjorie convinces Kadarin to let Lew recover from the drugs, and together they decide that Sharra must be stopped, even if it takes their deaths - and the deaths of everyone in the Sharra circle - to close the dimensional gateway that fuels it. As they enter the circle and prepare to attempt it, Kennard finally reaches Lew and adds his power to theirs. The gateway is sealed, but Lew is gravely wounded and Marjorie close to death; with the strength of desperation, Lew manages to teleport himself and Marjorie to Arilinn, but it is too late for Marjorie. Despite the closing of the gateway, the Sharra matrix remains too powerful to be left on Darkover where its power could be raised again; Kennard decides to leave Darkover, taking the matrix and Lew with him, hoping that Terran medicine can heal wounds that Darkovan psi power cannot. The Terrans, now aware of just what kind of long-range weapons the Compact was made to control, promise to do their part in keeping it. Dyan accepts responsibility for his abuse of Danilo, and names him heir to Ardais as recompense. And Regis relinquishes his dream of the stars and takes his place as the Hastur heir on the Council. Hard lessons have been learned - at least for a time.

I got a used copy on this from Amazon for only one penny. I believe the entire series is pretty much out of print, so I'm not sure how much luck I'll have tracking down the others if I ever feel the urge. This is the first of the Darkover novels that I picked up. I chose this one because I read several reviews stating this was the best place to start...but I'm not sure I agree with that. I was pretty confused for the majority of the book, between trying to understand the setting, the differences between the Terrans (clearly of Earth origin) and the Darkovans, and who was related to who, along with all the made-up words and customs. I don't think I would have told anyone to start here.Even so, something about the book kept me reading. It's narrated by two characters - in first person by Lew Alton, and in third by Regis Hastur. Their stories run parallel to each other. I thought the split narrative was interesting and definitely worked in the book's favor. Both characters were likeable enough, though I found myself more drawn to Regis' narrative just because I related to him more. Which is funny, I guess, because I'm actually the same age as Lew, but I related more to a young teenager. Oh well. I think I read this more for the characters than the plot. The plot was interesting enough, I guess, but I think it would have resonated more if I'd read some of the other novels first. I honestly didn't care much about all the stuff that was happening with the Sharra matrix because...I just kept feeling like I was missing important information, something that would make me care about what was happening. I just didn't care.I was happy when Dani and Regis finally confronted their feelings for each other. I like romance, I'll admit it. Usually I read fantasy books more for the plot, but in this case I was more invested in the emotional journey. Another thing that hugely bothered me was the poor writing quality. It was okay enough that I didn't drop the book altogether, but there are parts where it's just...bad. Like this section: "He lay there dying, his body torn with the last dying convulsions, unable to cross that dark threshold, failed, dying, burning..." Okay, I get it, HE THINKS HE'S DYING. There were multiple sections in which description was either repeated or just poorly done, and there were so many instances where multiple characters spoke within the same paragraph that sometimes it got confusing. I'm not sure if this is a first novel, but if it is then I hope the writing got better.I liked the characters enough that I may continue the series, but it's not very high on my priority list.

Do You like book The Heritage Of Hastur (1984)?

Set on the planet Darkover, a lost colony of Terra. The humans who landed there have developed a feudal system of government, and have interbred with the reclusive indigenous people. Their new environment led to some families developing specific psychic abilities, and becoming leaders of the government.The Heritage of Hastur relates the intertwined histories of Regis Hastur, the future ruler of Darkover, in his days as a youth training in the guards, and Lew Alton, son of a powerful ruling family, who is bitter about having a Terran mother. Both young men get caught up in political and personal struggles that effect how they view their sexual identities and psychic abilities. They come into contact with a faction that holds a wild matrix from the Ages of Chaos, a faceted gemstone that enhances psychic ability, and in this case, houses a dangerous power of its own.This is not a book for people who have issues with same-sex relationships. But it is an excellent story of power vs. responsibility, love vs. duty, and the lure of powerful forces to lead people into horrible decisions. This was, and is, top-notch SF that was progressive in its day.
—Jackie "the Librarian"

I'll let this novel stand for Bradley's long, very intriguing Darkover series. If you'd like to lose yourself in another world, this series is an excellent candidate.Part science fiction (plenty of sorta science space technology), part fantasy (Terrans land on an apparently "primitve" planet, and take a long time to wake up to the fact that there is an ancient, complex civilation based on levels of telepathy), the novels move around in time, and back & forth between Terran & Darkovan POV.Settle in for a good long sojourn!
—L Greyfort

I wavered in the extreme on this book. There were moments when I considered putting it down and not picking it back up again. And yet each time I put it down, it called to me, and I had to return to it. The character's were unbelievably compelling. I absolutely bought them, hook, line, and sinker. I liked the world, and I liked the plot. So what was the problem? Well, I know it's been advised to start with this book. The problem was, I had no concept of the psi talents. I didn't know or thus fully appreciate luran, tower training, matrix, or any of that. It made it hard to understand why things were important to the characters. I didn't understand the matrices at all. I liked the writing. I liked the lessons and growth in the characters.
—Gardavson

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