I resurrect another review of a rather nice original anthology from a small press, back in 2008. This review originally appeared in Locus, as a Divers Hand review.
Lace and Blade, edited by Deborah J. Ross (Leda (an imprint of
Norilana Books,
A review by Rich Horton
A particular highlight is Sherwood Smith’s novella “The Rule of Engagement”,
in which a woman is kidnapped by a man who hopes to marry her, and must find a
way to engineer her escape without causing political issues, or harm to the
man’s retainers. The story is satisfying in its scope, and hints at a
fascinating backstory … all part of a grand fantastical history that Smith has
been elaborating since childhood, and which is the source of her excellent Inda novels for DAW.
Tanith Lee’s “Lace-Maker, Blade-Taker, Grave-Breaker, Priest” is also great
fun – on a ship journey, a couple of swordsmen take a sudden inexplicable
dislike to each other, to the point of proposing a duel. But a shipwreck
intervenes, and the real story is eventually made clear on the (mostly
swordless) island at which they end up. Most readers will see quickly the shape
of the story, and the twist, but it remains a delight getting there.
Two stories very nicely use Spanish settings. Robin Wayne Bailey’s “Touch of
Moonlight” has a Lady encountering an outlaw – rumored to actually be a ghost –
while on a journey to ransom her younger brother. By the end, supernatural
beings have been encountered – as well as, of course, more naturally beastly
humans. In Mary Rosenblum’s “Night Wind”, a young man is being pushed to a
marriage he fears will be loveless, in order to save his family’s fading fortunes.
But the mysterious rider called the Night Wind may change his ideas … again,
the reader will recognize immediately what’s going on, but the story still
satisfies.
Dave Smeds, in “The Beheaded Queen”, features the most interesting main
character, as indicated by the title. And her fate is treated uncompromisingly
– her interest is seeing to the future of her son. Madeleine E. Robins’s
“Virtue and the Archangel” reminded me just a bit of her wonderful Sarah
Tolerance novels (how I wish a publisher would pick them up so she could write
more), in telling of a woman led by circumstance to a not very respectable job
as a private investigator – here she helps an old school friend to recover a
lost jewel.
The other stories come from Diana L. Paxson – an effective tale set in
Brazil; Chaz Brenchley – sort of a pendant to his novel Bridge of Dreams, involving enough but perhaps just a bit too much
a side trip and not its own journey; and Catherine Asaro, whose story was the
only one here to really disappoint me.

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