Sheepfarmer’s Daughter by
Elizabeth Moon
Original Publication Year: 1988
Genre(s): Fantasy
Series: The Deed of Paksenarrion #1
Awards: Compton
Crook Award
Format: Audio (from Audible)
Narrated by: Jennifer Van Dyck
This is, perhaps arguably, a
modern classic of the fantasy genre. I
call it a classic because I feel like it shows up on people’s lists as a
favorite especially amongst all the epic fantasy that was being
produced in the 1980’s and 1990’s from Terry Brooks, David Eddings and many
others besides. I’ve had it on my TBR
for so long, it got a place on my 100 Books Project List as I felt it
was important that I read it. In the
end, I found this book quite odd and somewhat disappointing though I did like
it.
The first thing I would
characterize as unusual was that this was my first experience with what I would
call “military fantasy”. Sure, a lot of
fantasy deals with war but this book reminded me of a Robert Heinlein novel
(like Starship Troopers) transplanted to a generic European-type fantasy
setting. The military structure is basically exactly like the modern American
military except with swords and horses and the person in ultimate charge being
a Duke. There’s a boot camp and
companies with sergeants and captains; there are non-commissioned officers and
commissioned officers, a mess etc….
It is into this military
environment that the sheepfarmer’s daughter, Paksenarrion or Paks, runs because she dreams of a life as a soldier.
She joins a reputable mercenary company that allows women and begins her
life as a soldier. This first volume
details Paks first 2-3 years in the company and how ever-so-slowly, day by day,
her star begins to rise and it becomes apparent that Paks is something
special.
The second unusual thing, is
alluded to in that last sentence. This
is a VERY detailed and rather mundane narrative. The reader is with Paks from day one of her
training and, it seems like, every day after that for the following three
years. It gives a very clear picture of
the life of a soldier – the training, the first battle, methodically looting a
city, the death of comrades. There are a
few fantastical happenings but the story seems to concentrate on the everyday
details. Sometimes I found this very
interesting and other times I found it dragged.
The prose is also pretty straightforward and matter-of-fact which fits
the military focus and also lends to the air of mundanity.
Everything I’ve mentioned thus
far was fine and gave the book a unique flair.
The methodical approach to the storytelling dragged at times but that
wasn’t a major problem. A major problem
was that the characters, even Paks felt very shallow. Very few of the secondary characters in the
book are fleshed out in any real way and it was somewhat difficult to keep
track of the rotating, basically identical-except-for-rank fellow
soldiers. Paks herself is simple and
straightforward with very little interest in anything beyond soldiering -she’s not
interested in men, she’s not interested in religion, she’s not even that
interested in the other cultures that they encounter. I in turn wasn’t that interested in her and
that is what ended up making this just an okay read.
FINAL VERDICT: A unique, very detailed-oriented military
fantasy that I ended up having trouble engaging with because of lackluster,
generic characters. I’m not sure I’ll
pick up the sequels. 3 out of 5 Stars.
NOTE: I just realized that last Wednesday I review The Mermaid's Daughter. I am unknowingly in a reading streak of books about people's daughters. Odd.
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