Lavondyss is, as its author Robert Holdstock puts it, ‘not a sequel but a return visit to Ryhope Wood (Mythago Wood). The original Mythago Wood I read regularly, though this was
only my second reading of Lavondyss. I loved it. And was left wondering why I'd not returned before. Tallis Keeton is a young woman living on the edge of Ryhope Wood, she's deeply connected to the surrounding landscape,it's places, monuments and myths; and they to her. She sees the land differently, her connection and understanding deepens as getting older she develops a range of shamanic abilities, including the ability to create hollowings, portals through time and place, with the aid of her hand-crafted wooden masks. Over a decade before, in the events of Mythago Wood, her older brother Harry Keeton had disappeared whilst on a quest into the heart of of the Wood with Stephen Huxley. Through a hollowing she hears Harry call to her from the heartland of the wood. With her burgeoning shamanic powers and collection of masks Tallis is determined to somehow rescue Harry from the depths of Ryhope Wood. Actions though have ramifications, and her interactions with the Mythago world have altered the course of stories,
and as a consequence the paths of all those journeying through the wood. Holdstocks' writing is beautiful, evocative, his story telling compelling; he's created a recognizable world, plausible and engaging, imbued throughout with genuine magic. Deftly weaving archaeology, history and the natural world with mythology and lore, exploring the place and necessity of stories in the human experience, how they've shaped us and our navigation of the world. It's a weird and wonderful read.

No comments:
Post a Comment