Title: Duainfey Author: Sharon Lee and Steve Miller Year: 2007 Publisher: Baen Books Reviewer: Katherine Ray I read this book at the end of February, two months ago now, but I could not write about it then as I was so very disappointed by the ending. So why am I writing now? The sequel to "Duainfey" just arrived at our library this week, and as soon as it's done being properly processed, I'll read it. The ending of "Duainfey," if you haven't guessed by this, is a terrible place to leave a stand-alone book, but an acceptable stopping point in a longer story arc. For example, you don't put a character through an ordeal and then not let that character use what has been learned in the ordeal before the story ends, and you don't introduce a really interesting character and then not do too much with that character in a stand alone book. However, regarding "Duainfey" as a really long, excellent exposition to a further story makes it fit much better into my story-telling sense, and thus makes me happy to talk about it. "Duainfey" is a much better book than the inside cover blurb would have you think. It's not a simple "sweet Victorian maid flees ill-fated arranged marriage and finds her true destiny" story. It's a story about elves and a story about humans, and we get to see the elf point of view more than one normally does in most fantasy stories. The elves are recognizably elves, which means they follow the rules set down in Diana Wynne Jones's "Tough Guide to Fantasyland," as well as other standard rules for elves. They're magical, beautiful, long-lived, and tricky. They live in a hard-to-reach location, have a queen, claim that the old elves are superior to the new ones, and are burned by iron. On the other hand, they are not portrayed as mysterious beings with unknowable goals either. In the prologue, (and hey, it's the prologue, this isn't much of a spoiler, now is it? but if you want you can skip to the end of the paragraph), the elves discover humans and have to figure out how to deal with this other species that is dangerous (has iron) and is really, ridiculously attractive to them. So the story has a lot of first meetings type of negotiations. The book has well made characters. How do I still remember this after two months? I couldn't put the book down, and I am a very character-centric reader. I know people who like explosions in their books, and there aren't too many guns in this book. I know people who are allergic to romance in books, and they would not have to be wary of this one. There are people who want the characters of books to be psychologically tormented, and now that I know this is a series, if book two turns out to be good I may recommend it to that friend. There are people who are in love with scenery and world-building, and Duainfey was good enough for my purposes there, but I have no idea how it ranks in the eyes of a connoisseur. I like my characters. I liked the "maiden about to be wed" character before she ran off, and anticipate liking her again later, and I loved the second main character to appear on the scene.