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Kirith Kirin, by Jim Grimsley
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Kirith Kirin is like no other fantasy that you have ever read. Jim Grimsley has created a fantasy that could have come right from our world where power and greed can tempt, and sometimes conquer, even the most rightist person and where knowing who your friends and enemies are can be very difficult if not impossible. Yet it is not our world. For in Kirith Kirin's world magic is real, immortals walk the land, and people are sometimes the playthings for the dark arts. The Blue Queen, upon resuming the throne while King Kirith Kirin's eternality is renewed in the Arthen forest, has partnered with a magician of the dark arts. No longer does she need to leave the throne to renew her eternal nature. Swayed by promises of the dark magician, she has claimed the throne forever and is extending her influence to the far corners of the world. Malleable grey clouds, sidewinding wind, and intelligent lightning bolts made the trip across the vast Girdle nearly impossible. Out of nowhere, the Blue Queen's Patrols made haste to kill the boy and the warrior before they could safely reach the deep forest of Arthen. Riding upon two magnificent stallions, one a royal Prince out of Queen Mnemarra, Jessex and his uncle Sivisal reached Arthen despite a deadly storm that reeked of magic. Thus begins Jessex's new life as he enters Arthen and moves into the royal court of Kirith Kirin.
- Sales Rank: #1266351 in Books
- Published on: 2000-05-15
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.50" h x 5.50" w x 1.25" l,
- Binding: Paperback
- 456 pages
From Library Journal
In a land ravaged by the rule of the usurper known as the Blue Queen, a young boy fulfills his destiny by entering the service of Kirith Kirin, who seeks to reclaim his rightful throne. Jessex grows strong in his magical studies and fighting skills, finding both companionship and love in the company of the man he serves and discovering his crucial role in the battle against the evil that overshadows his land. Mainstream novelist and playwright Grimsley (My Drowning) crafts an elegant tale of love, war, and magic in the epic fantasy tradition. Most libraries should consider.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Review
"For a first time fantasist, Grimsley has shown a remarkable understanding of what makes the genre powerful." -- Rob Gates, NY Blade
"Grimsley crafts an elegant tale of love, war, and magic in the epic fantasy tradition. Most libraries should consider." -- Library Journal, May 2000
About the Author
Jim Grimsley was born on September 21, 1955 in rural eastern North Carolina and was educated at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, studying writing with Doris Betts and Max Steele. He has published nineteen short stories and essays in various quarterlies, including DoubleTake, New Orleans Review, Carolina Quarterly and the New Virginia Review. His short fiction has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize on three occasions and the body of his work published in the Carolina Quarterly was nominated for a GE Outstanding Young Writer Award in 1983. Jim's story "City and Park" was listed as one of the outstanding short stories of 1982 in the Houghton Mifflin anthology Best American Short Stories of 1982.
Jim's first play, The Existentialists, was produced at ACME Theatre in May-June 1983. His second play, The Earthlings, was produced at 7Stages in January-February 1984. In 1986, Jim became Playwright-in-Residence at 7Stages and continues in that capacity to the present. His third full length play, Mr. Universe, was produced in the newly-renovated theatre in July-September 1987. The play went on to productions in New Orleans, Los Angeles and New York, where the New Federal Theatre's Off-Broadway production of the play drew praise from the New York Times.
The play won the George Oppenheimer/Newsday Playwriting Award for 1988, a $5000 prize which is given to the best new playwright being produced in the New York-Long Island area. Mr. Universe also won the Southeastern Playwriting Contest sponsored in 1986 by Southern Exposure, and an excerpt from the play was published in the summer 1986 edition. Another excerpt from the play was recently included in the actor's anthology Best Scenes of the 80s.
Jim was awarded the Bryan Family Prize for Drama by the Fellowship of Southern writers in 1993 for his distinguished body of work as a playwright. Judges for the Fellowship award were Romulus Linney and Horton Foote. Jim's full-length plays, besides those mentioned, include Math and Aftermath (1988), White People (1989), The Lizard of Tarsus (1990) and Belle Ives (1991) all premiering at 7Stages in Atlanta. Jim's adaptation of The Fall of the House of Usher was presented at the Theatrical Outfit as part of the Atlanta theatre's Edgar Allen Poe Festival in February 1991 and his play Man With a Gun was produced by SAME in 1989.
Jim's first novel, Winter Birds, was published in the United States by Algonquin Books in the fall of 1994. The novel was first published in German translation in Germany in the spring of 1992, and was translated into French and published by Editions Métailié in 1994. Winter Birds won the Sue Kaufman Prize for best first novel from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and was a finalist for the PEN/Hemingway Award. In France, Winter Birds was awarded the Priz Charles Brisset.
Jim has subsequently published two novels in the United States, 1995'sDream Boy, winner of the American Library Association's Gay/Lesbian Literary Award and a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award, and My Drowning, released in January of 1997, for which he was named Georgia Author of the Year. His books are available in German, French, Spanish, Dutch, and Portuguese. His novel, Comfort and Joy, will be published in October 1999 by Algonquin Books; the novel was first published in Germany in 1993.
His fiction has appeared in various anthologies, including Men on Men 6, Flesh and the Word 4, and Bending the Landscape: Science Fiction; his story in that collection, "Free in Asveroth," was selected for publication in The Year's Best Science Fiction, edited by Gardner Dozois.
Jim teaches writing at Emory University in Atlanta and has been a featured reader at book events throughout the Southeast, including readings at the 1994 and 1995 Southern Book Festivals in Nashville. He is a member of the Southeast Playwrights Project, PEN America, the Dramatists Guild, and Alternate ROOTS.
Most helpful customer reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
Overwhelmingly Gorgeous
By Sho
Kirith Kirin is a huge departure into a world that grasps you right away. The two main characters, Jessex and Kirith Kirin, have a very slow-paced, fully realized and emotional relationship throughout the entire book. Yet the book doesn't shy away from plot nor the satisfying quality in the main love story. Both are large in scope and are simply mind-blowing; the scale in which you will imagine things while reading this book is unable to be put into words.
There are dozens of side characters that enrich the lives and events in Kirith Kirin, but they never seem ridiculous or cliche. This book does not have the olden sound of J.R. Tolkien either, though the cover alludes to that sort of thing. Instead, it is a melancholic adventure of young Jessex, who you will see lose his innocence willingly in order to protect his King, Kirith Kirin. Instead, images of Miyazaki films or Steampunk (minus the technology) darkness come to mind.
You could say that the main themes throughout this book are sacrifice, loyalty, and endearing through the near impossible. (However the ending, which I won't ruin for you, is questionable- but it leaves it open ended and ties up things you didn't even know you wanted tied up!)
As for both characters, they are highly developed and a delight to read. In the beginning of the book, there are beautiful snippets of a happy situation between the two- so you will be both satisfied in the light department and the darker parts of the story as well. I am quite picky with character types, but I loved both of them. Kirith Kirin is almost like a figure of victory, a handsome young man that happens to be a blend of human and legend; but on the other hand, he's somewhat selfish (when it comes to Jessex) and brash, (in a cute, emotional sort of way)and it's a wonderful foil to his own image. He has an aura of command about him which makes him desirable, but when alone with Jessex, he has a tenderness that balances fear and duty. Jessex is someone who, even though he is telling the story in first-person, (which is done beautifully and doesn't ruin the story) you still ache to understand him, and you feel for him when he gives up certain mortal-virtues in his quest to aid Kirith Kirin. He has unquestionable trust in Kirith Kirin, and though he ends up having otherworldly magic, he is still so small a person.
I've heard people have different thoughts of the "age" difference between Kirith Kirin and Jessex. However once you read certain parts, age is simply irrelevant. I mean, scientifically irrelevant. But, again, I won't ruin it.
And if you want action- along with all these other things- buy the book. It was completley worth my forty dollars. The scope of the magic system is enthralling; they occur in huge green fields with masterful "wizard towers" looming over the landscape- storms are brought up by magicians and the sheer force of two mages battling each other atop these towers is awe-inspiring. They ride horseback and control devastating power, and you'll never want to stop reading!
Overall, it's definitely in my top three. Maybe even number one. The length of the book is monstrous; the text is small and the 600 some-odd pages are satisfying and wonderfully done. The in-depth gay relationship thrives in the whole book; the two exist for the other and it is a beautiful asset to the plot. The adventure and battle system is unbelievable and huge in scope. The style of writing is highly advanced, almost poetic, and has an intricate quality only few can ever achieve. I would have easily smacked down more money than I paid.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Thank you for making this book available again!
By komkon2
An avid reader of SF and Fantasy, I put this book as a reminder on my Amazon wish list about 10y ago. I refrained from buying it, largely because the "most helpful customer review" (Ivy, April 15, 2001) mentioned it was "too close to pederasty" (though in the end rating it 4 stars). I did not want to associate with pederasty. So I did not buy it. And so it went out of print. A few days ago I found the author's Dream Boy in a bookstore, and read it. A novel that pulled the rug from under me. Wow. I checked the author on wikipedia and found "Kirith Kirin" again, for Kindle. Read it in two days. Also wow. A fully fledged high fantasy world. Reminded me a bit of Gene Wolfe's Wizard Knight, and of Carol Berg's Rai Kirah Rai Kirah books. The second for the depth of the fantasy world, the first for the weirdness and the language, and because it moved me similarly. Some here liked it to Wraeththu - well, that is gothic punk that does not compare. (Not all books with m/m relations in it compare. But Wraeththu's protagonist also happens to be 15 when he falls in love with a basically immortal creature. Nobody seems to have minded that.) So I say thank you for a wonderful, strange journey. I just ordered the author's two loose follow up novels (The Ordinary, The Last Green Tree). (And if you are still dubious because of that bloody p-word, let me remind you of the 12y age difference between Frodo and Sam.)
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
A Hero's Journey
By Lucas
Kirith Kirin is one of the best Gay Fantasy books I have read. It is a hero's journey, in the High Fantasy tradition. It is the story of Jessex, our narrator, and his part in the war between Drudaen Keerfax, Athryn Ardfalla and Kirith Kirin.
Jessex is descended from a long line of witches, and born into a country on the verge of civil war. The ruling Queen, Athryn Ardfalla, has too long resisted turning the throne over to its rightful successor (Kirith Kirin), using the powerful magic of the wizard Drudaen Keerfax to keep her eternally young, and taxing the kingdom's inhabitants into poverty and starvation in order to appease her own greed. As the kingdom grows increasingly restless, Jessex is recruited into Kirith Kirin's army, after the seer Mordwen Illythin is sent a dream foretelling Jessex' arrival.
After Jessex leaves the farm he was raised in, his family is slaughtered by Athryn, his mother kidnapped by Drudaen, and his own secret training in the magical art of Wyyvisar begins. From here, Jessex' journey is long, and at times slow. But as he grows stronger, he will also discover true friendship with his comrades, find love in the midst of war, and recognize his own responsibility and courage despite fear and the slim odds of success.
Although the story was slow at a couple of points, I absolutely loved reading Kirith Kirin. I became completely wrapped up in the character of Jessex and his journey through war. Although the book is "good vs. evil," many of the characters develop a depth which is far more complicated.
The book is moving and engrossing, and easily ranks as one of the best Gay Fantasy novels I have read. I look forward to reading more by Jim Grimsley.
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