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The Tempering of Men
The Tempering of Men
The Tempering of Men
Audiobook10 hours

The Tempering of Men

Written by Sarah Monette and Elizabeth Bear

Narrated by Chris Chambers

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

About this audiobook

In Iskryne, the war against the Trollish invasion has been won, and the lands of men are safe again . . . at least for a while. Isolfr and his sister, the Konigenwolf Viradechtis, have established their own wolfhaell. Viradechtis has taken two mates, and so the human pack has two war leaders. And in the way of the pack, they must come to terms with each other, must become brothers instead of rivals-for Viradechtis will not be gainsaid.

She may even be prescient.

A new danger comes to Iskryne. An army of men approaches, an army that wishes to conquer and rule. The giant trellwolves and their human brothers have never hunted men before. They will need to learn if they are to defend their homes.

Contains mature themes.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 2, 2019
ISBN9781541487581

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Reviews for The Tempering of Men

Rating: 3.6062500125 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

80 ratings8 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Well, this second book in the series was not what I was expecting. I loved the first A Companion to Wolves and the main character Isolfr and naively at this point, I thought this second book would be from his perspective as well. It was not. At all. Instead it focused on his two wolfjarls and two wolfcarls in the "pack". This ended up giving the reader a sense of how the other characters see Isolfr which was interesting and these four other characters quickly grew on me because of Bear and Monette's writing skill. However the book overall seemed to be half a book. It's a middle book but it almost would have been better to have been longer, connected to the next book somehow, because this feels incomplete. It's only a transition. Still, the writing is great and the little that happens is engaging and fast-paced. Switching between these four characters helped on that front. This book wasn't a disappointment but it was not as good as the first. I'm still looking forward to the next book, hopefully published next year. It looks like it will pick up into the greatness of the first book but we shall have to see.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I'm still amused and interested by this series -- now the wolf men need someone to fight -- enter Romans! Perfect. I'm so enjoying this very fantastical-historical story.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This sequel to a Companion to Wolves has a very different feel to it, but is still very readable. What do you do when the Epic Battle is won, the trolls are defeated, and you are halls of Viking Warriors psychically bonded to wolves with no enemy left to fight? I liked seeing the hero of the last book through other's eyes, and I loved the discovery of the svartalfar, and the subtle change of the elves from 'the mystical Other' to people with their own intricate differences and politics.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Really enjoyed the first, but just could NOT get into this one at all. Sent it back to the library.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I feel a bit bad giving this a less-than-great review, because I kind of didn’t expect to love it: I read the previous volume, A Companion to Wolves, and wasn’t captivated – perhaps it was unfair of me to read this at all. However, I love absolutely everything else that Sarah Monette has ever written, and read this out of a tendency toward completism. (I find Bear hit-or-miss.)

    Now, believe-you-me, I am all in favor of gay Vikings. I’m not opposed to psychic-companion-animals. It’s just that these characters and this scenario really didn’t come together for me. The characters didn’t feel distinct from one another. And, unfortunately, I found this sequel even more unsatisfying than the previous book.

    If you really, really loved the first book and just really want to know what happens to the characters next, you may like it. Because this book is ‘what happens to the characters next.’ Some stuff happens. Some nearly completely random stuff, which does not actually come together to form a plot. The wolfthreat wonders what to do now that trolls are defeated. A bear attacks a village. Romans show up, and are threatening. A wolf goes into heat and the situation must be dealt with. A bit of politicking and power struggling occurs. The various incidents related feel episodic and disjointed – I enjoyed the one about getting lost in a cave and discovering the cave-elves, but it didn’t tie in, dramatically, with other events . There’re a couple of sex scenes that felt very tacked-on, and didn’t flow into the rest of the writing.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Tempering of Men is the sequel to A Companion to Wolves, which came out in 2007. It picks up right where Companion left off, at the end of the trellwars, and this is the story of how the wolfcarls and their intelligent wolfish brothers and sisters learn what to do with themselves now. The wolfhaellen were formed to keep men safe from the trolls of the north, but now that the trolls are gone, is there still a purpose to the wolf-and-human packs?

    Where Companion was the story of Isolfr learning how to live as part of the pack and how to become the brother of a konigenwolf, a queen wolf, Tempering follows several different characters, all of them being drawn out of their comfortable place in the pack and into new roles. Vethulf and Skjaldwulf are Isolfr’s wolfjarls, the pack’s war-leaders, still learning how to rule together; Brokkolfr is one of the only survivors of his previous pack and is learning his place (and regaining his confidence) in his new one. Between the three of them you have a great range of characters, providing very different points of view on their changing world.

    Skjaldwulf is my favorite, though. He’d been in training for a poet before he bonded to a wolf, and it still shows in his sense of the dramatic and his instinct for narrative; he knows he’s in a story, and he tells it as he goes along. He’s frighteningly smart and more ambitious than he gives himself credit for. Although his moment of glory is at the AllThing, my favorite scene was his conversation with the invading Rhean captain. Skjaldwulf is not willing to see his countrymen become vassals to a foreign empire — but he knows that such an outcome would not be all bad, either. His internal tension is enthralling to see.

    The cultural details, both historical and invented, are just lovely — the politics of town and wolfhaell, and of the northern and southern alfs; the godsmen and sworn-sons and city jarls. This is a huge, wonderful, complicated world, and The Tempering of Men gives you plenty of opportunity to indulge in exploring it.

    Aside from its individual merits, though – of which there are plenty – the Iskryne world is a breaking down and re-imagining of the telepathic animal companion fantasy. Tempering is a little less biting in its way thanCompanion - which introduced the open mating, or what happens when the wolf bitch you’ve been telepathically bonded to goes into heat and all the dogs are willing to fight over her. Iskryne is a wonderful fantasy world, but it’s a gritty one. That doesn’t mean it’s bleak – far from it. The wolves and their men love each other with a love that is adorable to see, and in many ways Tempering is a book about the men learning to love each other as well. (…Yes, in that way, too.)

    I love both Bear and Monette’s work, and with The Tempering of Men, they are continuing to work wonderfully well together. (For more examples of their collaboration, check out their short story “Boojum” in the Fast Ships, Black Sails anthology, or the many-author shared-world series Shadow Unit.) And if all goes well, there’s a third book in the Iskryne series scheduled for 2013, An Apprentice to Elves. Hurrah!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    To be quite truthful, I didn't really need this book. Don't get me wrong, it was nice. But I loved the first book. This book was less brutal than the first and less harsh, but it also missed some of its beauty. The world is expanded and we get to know more about the humans in the warmer south. The wolfheallan need a new purpose now that all the trolls are gone and this book is about them rebuilding their halls and finding a purpose, as well as identifying a new (human) threat. Unfortunately, I wasn't really that interested in the south. And it isn't interesting: it's just a human world like ours a few hundred years back. In book 1, the wolfcarls lived in a world with magic, trolls and svart alfar. In this one, they live in an ordinary world, almost. Ok, there are some scenes with svart alfar, but those don't seem to be going anywhere. Which is another problem I had with this book: it seems to be ambling along, not really going anywhere, describing scenes whose purpose is unclear, and then it ends at a weird spot. I would almost think that this book is a very long introduction to the third upcoming one. I hope so. Because this book may have been enjoyable, it didn't have the quality of the first by a long shot.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Ok, so you have your soulbonded wolves, with the resultant man- or men-on-man action come mating time. The first book found them fighting off a threat to their survival from the trolls; this book is instead a lot of journeys and smaller investigations and battles as the wolf-folk try to figure out to do without an immediate existential threat (and begin to detect the Roman-analogue threat from the south). No palaces, but the equivalent in palace intrigue: it's about relationships and planning for the future. If you liked the world of A Companion to Wolves, you may like this, but it's really the characters wandering around in that world rather than a new adventure specifically.