Format: Paperback, 384 pages
Release Date: September 10, 2019
Publisher: Daw Books
Source: Publisher
Genre: Fantasy / Action & Adventure
From an Aurora Award-winning author comes the second book in a gripping portal fantasy series in which one woman’s powers open the way to a labyrinth of new dimensions.
Shawna Keys has fled the world she only recently discovered she Shaped, narrowly escaping death at the hands of the Adversary who seized control of it…and losing her only guide, Karl Yatsar, in the process.
Now she finds herself alone in some other Shaper’s world, where, in her first two hours, she’s rescued from a disintegrating island by an improbable flying machine she recognizes from Jules Verne’s Robur the Conqueror, then seized from it by raiders flying tiny personal helicopters, and finally taken to a submarine that bears a strong resemblance to Captain Nemo’s Nautilus. Oh, and accused of being both a spy and a witch.
Shawna expects—hopes!—Karl Yatsar will eventually follow her into this new steampunky realm, but exactly where and when he’ll show up, she hasn’t a clue.
In the meantime, she has to navigate a world where two factions fanatically devoted to their respective leaders are locked in perpetual combat, figure out who the Shaper of the world is, find him or her, and obtain the secret knowledge of this world’s Shaping. Then she has to somehow reconnect with Karl Yatsar, and escape to the next Shaped world in the Labyrinth…through a Portal she has no idea how to open.
Story Locale: Alternate worlds
Master of the World is the second installment in author Edward Willett's Worldshapers series. The story picks up where the previous installment left off. Protagonist Shawna Key's life has been fundamentally changed forever in just a few short days. She had just opened up her new pottery store called "Worldshaper," when black clad terrorists showed up along with a man called The Adversary. The Adversary not only tried to kill her, but did kill her best friend which caused Shawna to turn back time to 3 hours. He also ended up stealing her powers and her world making her public enemy number one.
She learned from a man named Karl Yatsar that she was a "Shaper" one of many in a vast Labyrinth of Shaped Worlds, and possibly one of the strongest who can stop the Adversary before he has enough power to destroy the universe. Losing her world, which she still has no memories of creating, or being trained by someone called Ygrair, or the First World, caused Shawna to escape to another realm leaving Karl behind. The realm she ends up in should be called Jules Verne World because of the main parties involved are named after Verne characters.
After she's rescued from a disintegrating island by an improbable flying machine
she recognizes from Jules Verne's Robur the Conqueror, she's seized from
it by raiders flying tiny personal helicopters, and finally taken to a
submarine that bears a strong resemblance to Captain Nemo's Nautilus. She's accused of being a spy, or a witch, whichever explains her appearance in this world. They have no idea on how to handle Shawna. She's told that she can help defeat the evil Prince Dakkari while also learning about her own Shaping abilities from the Shaper of the land, Robur the Conqueror who apparently knew Shawna from before.
Shawna
attempts at navigating this world by herself is so much different without the aid of Karl by her side. In other words, she makes tons of mistakes! She knows her goal is to gain
control of the shaped world, but without details, advice, or Karl’s
alien powers, she needs to use her wits to come up with plans on the
fly, relying on her sometimes inadequate memory of the writings of Jules
Verne on which the world is based. Who is a friend? Who is a foe? How long can she hold out until Karl arrives to help her? Why can't Shawna remember before? How long until the Adversary catches up to Shawna?
One
Buffeted
by swirling winds, I clung to the rope ladder lifting me from the
mysterious-and rapidly disintegrating-island in the ocean below toward
the giant flying ship in the sky above and reflected on what a lousy
week I was having.
Sunday
night, I’d woken from a nightmare in which a stranger wearing a cowboy
hat and a long black duster had been standing at the foot of my bed,
only to look out my window and see a stranger in a cowboy hat and a long
black duster looking up at my bedroom window.
Monday night, he’d been there again.
Tuesday,
I’d officially opened my new shop, Worldshaper Pottery, on trendy
Blackthorne Avenue in Eagle River, Montana (hipster haven of the
West)-although the store’s opening had been overshadowed (literally) by
the scaffolding covering the entrance (supporting two young men hanging
the shop’s sign) and the black storm clouds hanging over the Rockies to
the west: clouds which, infuriatingly and bewilderingly, nobody but me
seemed to find threatening.
Still,
sinister strangers, scaffolding, and storm clouds aside, it had been
shaping up to be a pretty good day. I’d had coffee with my boyfriend,
Brent, at the Human Bean, the coffee shop down the street, and at lunch
had headed back to the Bean with my best friend, Aesha Tripathi.
That
was when things went literally to hell. Two vanloads of black-clad
terrorists pulled up outside, charged into the coffee shop, and started
shooting. Bullets tore Aesha’s slight body apart, right in front of my
eyes.
Then
the leader of the terrorists walked over to where I sat stunned on the
blood-slicked floor. “Hello, Shawna,” he said. “And goodbye.” He reached
out and touched my forehead. I felt a weird shock. Then he drew his
pistol and aimed it between my eyes. He was going to kill me.
This can’t be happening, I thought, and then, “This isn’t happening!” I screamed.
And
just like that, it wasn’t. It hadn’t. Suddenly, it was three hours
earlier-but Aesha was gone. So was everyone else who’d been killed in
the attack. And the worst of it was, nobody remembered they’d ever even
existed.
This,
to put it mildly, freaked me out. The sudden appearance inside my shop,
shortly thereafter, of the mysterious stranger who had been in both my
nightmare and the street outside my window did nothing to soothe my
nerves-especially not when he started spouting gibberish about me having
Shaped the world in which I lived, and having an amazing amount of
power, and being just one Shaper of many in a vast Labyrinth of Shaped
worlds, and possibly the only one who could save the Shaped worlds from
the Adversary who had just invaded my world (apparently he was the guy
who’d pointed his pistol at my head), if I’d just follow him into all
those other worlds and gather the knowledge of how they were Shaped, and
then carry it to somebody named Ygrair, who…
Yeah,
I pretty much stopped listening at that point, too. It was like “The
Story Thus Far” at the start of an episode of a television series with a
season-long story arc. When you’re bingeing the show on StreamPix (and
who watches TV any other way these days?), the minute you see that, you
click the “Skip Intro” button.
But
in the middle of this, “Previously, in made-up crap…” monologue, the
storm broke…again. And then terrorists were shooting at me…again. Left
without much choice, I fled with Karl Yatsar, as he called himself.
On
the radio, we heard the mayor describe me as a dangerous terrorist.
Apparently, when the Adversary had touched me, he’d stolen my knowledge
of how my world was Shaped, what Karl called the hokhmah. His power was
somewhat limited by the fact I was still alive, which meant we were
sharing the hokhmah, but he had enough to rewrite people’s memories just
by talking to them. He’d talked to the police, and the mayor, and…and
then, I called Brent, and he didn’t know who I was, and I knew the
Adversary had reached him, too. I smashed my cellphone, not out of
frustration (well, not just out of frustration), but because I realized
it could be used to track me. Karl Yatsar and I holed up that night in a
run-down closed-for-the-summer resort…
…and that was my very special Tuesday.
Wednesday
had a lot to live down to, but it managed. First thing in the morning, I
murdered a National Bureau of Investigation agent in a helicopter, just
by imagining the pilot had to help me at all costs, so successfully the
pilot pushed his partner out the door and onto the shore of the lake
across which Karl and I, in a canoe, were paddling for our lives. The
sound of the falling NBI agent hitting the wooden pier by the boatshed
went a long way toward convincing me both that I really could Shape my
world-and that maybe I really, really shouldn’t.
Then
we got into the helicopter, and the pilot cheerfully threw away his
career by flying us up into the mountains before leading the pursuit
away…though not as successfully as we might have hoped, since after Karl
and I hiked off into the woods toward Snakebite Mine, the location of
the Portal through which Karl had come from the previous world (already
taken over by the Adversary), pursuers showed up at the fire camp where
we’d landed. At Karl’s urging to “do something,” I hid our tracks by
making it snow…or rather, by making it to have already snowed. Which
also made for a cold, wet camp that night, but whatever.
Thursday,
we woke to an unwanted visitor, a grizzly, which I convinced to go away
just by thinking really hard that he should go away. After the snow and
the grizzly, I really couldn’t deny my ability to Shape my world, even
though (much to Karl’s consternation) I had no memory of his boss, the
mysterious Ygrair, or being taught by her to be a Shaper at some weird
school in some other version of reality, which Karl said was the
original reality, the First World. Then we had to go around an avalanche
that had resulted from the snow I’d caused to happen…I mean, caused to
have already happened…and I had another reason to take Jeff Goldblum’s
advice in Jurassic Park and think about whether, even though I could
Shape the world, I should. When it came to Shaping, it seemed clear,
unintended consequences were a bitch.
This
was reinforced later that night when we reached Snakebite Mine. After
Karl cold-bloodedly shot two members of the Adversary’s “cadre,” who had
been left there to guard the Portal, I Shaped the caretaker to let us
into the mine. He blew himself up instead, burying the Portal under tons
of rock…but I Shaped those, too, opening a path, and then helped Karl
destroy the Portal, cutting the Adversary off from some of his power.
Then
we drove off, and I Shaped an entire water-filled quarry into
existence, into which we dropped the truck, and then I Shaped the
caretakers of a dude ranch so we could take some horses, but I did it so
badly they both ended up dead, as did a perfectly innocent horse, and
then we rode all night long until I was practically dead in the saddle
(I stayed awake only because I’m allergic to horses, and it’s hard to
doze while sneezing), and then we finally slept…
…and that was Thursday.
Friday,
I Shaped a photographer to let us steal his car (at least I managed to
avoid killing him in the process-well, as far as I know). Then I Shaped a
pilot to fly us to Appleville, Oregon, my hometown…
…where
I Shaped my mother to forget I’d ever existed. To forget she’d ever had
a daughter. Of all the horrible things that had happened that week,
that was the worst.
But it was only Friday.
Saturday,
we stowed away on an apple truck to the coast. There, I Shaped a woman
to let us onto her sailing yacht, the Amazon, because Karl said the only
place he could make a Portal into the next world was out in the Pacific
somewhere. Unfortunately, the Coast Guard found us (by then the
Adversary had worked his way up to Shaping the President, so every
branch of law enforcement and the military was looking for us). I
managed to Shape our chunk of the ocean to bring up a fog (greatly
impressing Karl), but in the process I also accidentally fashioned a
typhoon, and that meant I spent Saturday night thinking really, really
hard about the Amazon not sinking.
I
guess I thought hard enough, because we were still afloat Sunday
morning-this morning-which is when we found, right where the Portal had
to be opened, a mysterious island that wasn’t on any charts. The next
thing we knew, there were helicopters and soldiers chasing us, and we
were trying to find our way through tunnels infested with monsters, and
then we were fighting for our lives on top of a human-sacrifice altar in
an arena full of shadowy not-quite-real spectators. At one point a
giant, naked David (Michelangelo’s David, to be precise) smashed an
equally naked (though not nearly as tall) soldier into bloody paste,
then there was a fight, and then I stabbed a guy’s foot, which spilled
blood on the altar, and the Portal opened, and I went through it…
…and Karl didn’t.
Which
was how I had found myself on the almost-vanished island below, alone,
only to be hauled aloft by a sailor hanging on to a rope ladder dangling
from a giant flying ship both held aloft and propelled by…well,
propellers.
In
the bow, the strange craft flew a black flag with a golden sun in the
center, one I’d recognized instantly, because I had gone through a Jules
Verne kick when I was little girl (at least, that’s how I remember it,
although what in my past is real and what contrived, I can’t tell): the
flag of Robur the Conqueror, from the novel of the same name, which
meant this impossible vessel had to be…yes, there it was, on the
dark-blue bow in glistening gold script: Albatross.
The
Albatross’ hull might have come straight from a sailing ship, except
for the absence of a keel-and except for the stubby biplane wings
extending to port and starboard. These I presumed were primarily for
steering purposes, not to provide lift, since the thing was currently
hovering. What held it aloft were seventy-four whirling helicopter
rotors, two on each of thirty-seven masts. The downdraft buffeted me as
the man in an old-fashioned sailor’s uniform who had pulled me onto the
lowest rungs of the ladder looked down at me, jerked his thumb upward,
then started to climb. For the first time, I saw he wore earplugs.
There
is a knack to climbing a rope ladder, which I apparently didn’t have.
The thing swayed and bounced as I struggled upward, until I thought I’d
either fall off or throw up, but eventually, panting, I reached the top.
My rescuer, with the help of another man in an equally old-fashioned
sailor’s uniform-honestly, they looked like they’d stepped straight out
of a community theater production of HMS Pinafore-hauled me onto the
deck, through an opening in the wire trellis that ringed it in lieu of
bulwarks, leaving me sprawled on my stomach. This gave me an unexpected
opportunity to closely examine the deck. It wasn’t made of wood; it was a
smooth, unbroken expanse of dark-blue…something.
What
was the Albatross made of? It had been nearly twenty years since I’d
read Robur the Conqueror. For some reason “paper” came to mind, but that
couldn’t be right, could it…?
The
sailors-or maybe “aeronauts” was a better term-grabbed my arms and
pulled me to my feet. I tried to tug free, but their grips tightened.
They half-dragged me aft, beneath the howling rotors-making me wish I
had earplugs, too-toward the cabins at the back. Atop the sternmost
stood the helmsman, as Pinaforeishly clad as the rest of the crew,
inside a glass wheelhouse. Behind him, as at the bow, hung two much
larger propellers, vertical rather than horizontal, though only idling
at the moment.
The
whole flying monstrosity was impossible…or was it? Verne had based his
flights of fancy on what the engineers and scientists of his time knew
or thought they knew. He’d certainly thought something like this was at
least theoretically possible. And from what Karl had told me, the Shaper
of this World could actually have altered the laws of physics enough to
allow something like this to fly.
I’ll
ask the Shaper when I see him, I thought, as I stumbled toward the
stern cabins (there were others at the bow) between my taciturn escorts,
deafened and windblown. Maybe I’m about to. Clearly, whoever had Shaped
this world had fancied himself master of it, and since this was the
Albatross, the airship of Robur the Conqueror, aka Master of the World
(the title of the second novel in which he’d appeared), he had surely
set himself up as that Verneian character-supervillain or superhero,
depending (like his better-known counterpart, Captain Nemo) on your
point of view.
In
a way, I was thrilled to be inside a world clearly modeled after Jules
Verne’s inventive tales. In another, I was terrified. Karl had not come
through the Portal with me. I was alone, and while I knew in a general
way what I was supposed to do to fulfill the quest I’d been unwillingly
given-find the Shaper and get him/her to somehow give me his/her
hokhmah, so that if/when the Adversary arrived, he could not steal that
hokhmah, kill the Shaper, and then reShape this world into another copy
of his preferred totalitarian “utopia”-there was one tiny little detail
of that process Karl had never spelled out for me: exactly how one took
the hokhmah of another Shaper, even if it were freely offered.
We
reached the only door in the starboard side of the stern cabins. The
aeronaut who had first hauled me onto the rope ladder pulled it open;
the other propelled me through it.
i have to be in the right mood for steampunk. thanks for the great review
ReplyDeletesherry @ fundinmental