Title: The Hallowed Hunt [Chalion Book 3] Author: Lois McMaster Bujold Year: 2005 Publisher: Eos Reviewer: Brian Sniffen This is the last book of Bujold's "Gods" contract, finishing the set containing "Curse of Chalion" and "Paladin of Souls". As Curse covered the Daughter and Paladin the Bastard, Hallowed Hunt covers the Son and to some extent the barbarian animal gods beyond civilization. It's a pity Bujold is unlikely to do books based on the Mother or the Father. I found the hero, Ingrey, as unappealing as I'd found the heroine of Paladin for the first chapter or so. Much like Ista, Ingrey wakes up and changes about 50 pages in. From then on, this has all the craft and quality I'd expect from Bujold. Out of the usual Vorkosigan context, some of the artistry is easier to see---there are more theological fantasy works to compare this against than there are parallels to the space-opera-free sci-fi that surrounds Miles. The plot focusses on a few lords of a Scotland-like barbarian kingdom, conquered and civilized centuries ago. Some of the wild magics of their shamans still persist and trouble the pseudoChristianized moderns. Ingrey is a victim of such spells, trying to make it in a world dominated by the Church as a henchman to the King's Chancellor. His comfortable scraping-by is interrupted by new curses out of the past and new victims. One of them's cute, so he gets involved. This brings him into a web of plots and schemes that would make Simon Illyan jealous, and which pad out the next 400 pages. When things finish, we finally understand what sparked the conspiracies and tied together the intrigues, and the ending leaves all the characters at the end of their stories, and a few at the beginning of new stories. If you like Eddings, you might appreciate the degree to which Bujold surpasses his theology---though her sense of adventure is never quite as thrilling as his. If you like Vorkosigan more than Weber's Harrington, you'll likely enjoy this series. They can be read out of order almost harmlessly, though some of the nonessential theology is more clearly explained if read in order.