Title: Warrior and Witch Author: Marie Brennan Year: 2006 Publisher: Aspect Reviewer: Jake Beal My previous review, of Ms. Brennan's excellent novel, "Doppelganger," was actually motivated largely by a desire to read "Warrior and Witch." Again, there is the terrible cover and a back blurb that is not much better, but a few pages of reading convinced me that I wanted to read it. As "Warrior and Witch" is the sequel to "Doppelganger," I clearly needed to read that one first, and as may be seen by my review of it, it did not disappoint. This book picks up much where the previous book left off, albeit with a somewhat different main character. Those who have read either "Doppelganger" or the terrible spoiler blurb on "Warrior and Witch" will know what I mean. To my surprise and delight, it immediately took a very different turn that the previous book, while still retaining the fresh tone and well thought out development. You see, "Doppelganger" was basically a combination of detective story and quest story, and resolved with some legitimate deus ex machina that goes and shakes up a major institution of Ms. Brennan's invented world. In "Warrior and Witch," we have front-row seats for the backlash. Suddenly everything taken for granted in the previous book is coming apart at the seams, all of the solid foundations are crumbling away, and why? Because in the first book, the good guys won. Her handling of this difficult story has greatly increased my respect for Ms. Brennan as a writer. The backlash she writes about is not some ham-handed universal thumb on the scales like Modesitt applies in his Sisyphean hamster-wheel of order and chaos, but rather the birth pangs of legitimate cultural change. What's more, the opposition are not even clearly evil or in the wrong. Their tactics may quickly sap the reader's sympathy, but their point of view is coherent and the side we're rooting for does not end up with clean hands either. My one complaint was that she had to go and end with a deus ex machina again. The first book demanded it, but this one did not. I could think of several ways that she could have reached the same resolution without it, and it left a sour taste in my mouth, but for all that it's only a small thing and can be easily forgiven. I thus recommend this book to anyone who has a taste for fantasy and is tired of unsophisticated treatments of characters and the world they live in.