aBsUrD sage reviewed A Spell for Chameleon by Piers Anthony
I didn't even have high hopes and but damn
2 stars
Content warning overly simplified spoilers
tl;dr: Bink's magic is literally "ex machina"
Mass Market Paperback
English language
Published Dec. 12, 1985 by Del Rey.
Xanth was the enchanted land where magic ruled - where every citizen had a special spell only he could cast. It was a land of centaurs, dragons and basiliks.But poor Bink alone had no magic. And unless he got some - and fast - he would be exiled.
The Good Magician Humfrey was convined that Bink did indeed have magic, magic as powerful as any possessed by the King or Good Magician Humfrey himself. But no one could fathom the nature of Bink's very special magic. Bink was in despair. This was worse than having no magic at all...and he would still be exiled.
Content warning overly simplified spoilers
tl;dr: Bink's magic is literally "ex machina"
A Spell for Chameleon attempts to be a fantasy about appearances, assumptions, history, and the importance of treating people fairly. Unfortunately it is so agonizingly sexist that it can barely go ten pages without insulting women or upholding toxic masculinity.
I used to love this series, and I’d read up as far as A Swell Foop before stopping. But now that I’m mostly out of the toxic, sexist miasma of my childhood and teen years, the problems in this book are apparent from the first page. Bink has everything (telling us he’s smart, good looking, amazing in every way), except for a finger he lost in a childhood incident made worse by internalized toxic masculinity and fear making him hide the damage until it was too late to be fixed by magic, and his apparent lack of magic in a world which demands that one’s magical talent appear by age …
Watched Deadpool 2 recently, and it having a character who has a power based on luck reminded me of this book. I realized I haven't read it since I was a teen so I got super excited about reading it again.
Some of the aspects of the book that I liked as a teen I still enjoyed, but its soo sexist. The amount of hate the author has towards women is barely veiled. At one point the author has the line "Cameleon, like most girls, had to answer the calls of nature often." And that's just one of the ones I wrote down.
So yea, I gave it a couple stars cause it's a neat story still, but ugh.
I was under the impression that these Xanth books were going to be amazing. Other readers have informed me of this, but i went in to the book with no expectations.
While I did like the main character pretty well, I though the book was written to suit 12-year-old boys. I didn't even get a lot of the word puns that this book was supposed to mention, but that could have been because i was reading the book in audio, and not text.
Another thin g irritated me was that it's eally obvious that Piers Anthony doesn't really like women. They all seem to be airheads with big boobs.
It is an interesting world, and interesting premise, but wow, what a terrible world for women Anthony has created. For a light fantasy about a magical world, the sexism creates an ugly shadow across the book. Really, the so called rape trial (yes, in a fantasy novel) is gob-smacking.
I love the Incarnations of Immortality series. This was the first Xanth I've read. I might try a few more and see, but probably won't rush into them right away.
Puerile.
This series made the big list of best fantasy books that came around a while back. It sounded interesting, so I decided to put it on my reading list. While this was a mistake, I learned a lot from these books: how to write a damn bad style. It is not the story, which is good. It is not the world, which is interesting. It is the execution: the characters are shallow and the writing style leaves something to be desired and if only there were a little less of it at times: Nothing is left to the imagination of the reader. The feelings of character's are named and explained in detail and they tend to change abruptly. The characters appear rough and unpolished. You can still see the good ideas but they don't shine.
Just a couple of quotes to prove my point
"This bothered Bink. He and Fanchon …
This series made the big list of best fantasy books that came around a while back. It sounded interesting, so I decided to put it on my reading list. While this was a mistake, I learned a lot from these books: how to write a damn bad style. It is not the story, which is good. It is not the world, which is interesting. It is the execution: the characters are shallow and the writing style leaves something to be desired and if only there were a little less of it at times: Nothing is left to the imagination of the reader. The feelings of character's are named and explained in detail and they tend to change abruptly. The characters appear rough and unpolished. You can still see the good ideas but they don't shine.
Just a couple of quotes to prove my point
"This bothered Bink. He and Fanchon sounded just like Trent, offering better terms to a captive enemy in return for his cooperation. Were they any different from the Evil Magician?"
That final question is one the reader should pose himself, for the author it should be enough to imply the question, or should it not?
Or this one at the closing of a chapter:
"He drew away from her. "We have to remove the bombs. Carefully," he said. But what about the emotional bombs within him?"
This has to be one of the worst uses of metaphor that I have ever seen.
Also there's the part where Bink muses on how Sabrina could not have loved him very much ... I don't want explicit, I want description that implies what the author wants to say:
"Her love had not been deep enough. She had loved him for the magic talent she had been convinced he had, as the son of strongly talented parents. The loss of that potential talent had undercut that love. She had not really wanted him as a person."
One last minus is the latent women-hating all throughout the book. Of course many fantasy books have mostly strong male characters and the females tend to be decoration only. However Xanth improves on this by having the character of Crombie who hates all women. As he is characterized just as in-depth as the rest it leaves us with the feeling that it is absolutely ok. At the beginning of the second book it becomes even worse when the three heroes go on adventure to escape their wives.
However the pretty idea of everyone having their distinct magic talent - and I really enjoy Bink's talent which the author manages to keep from the reader for nearly the whole first book - and the interaction of those talents to solve their problems still make for a certain amount of suspense. So I did get started on the second book also hoping that the writing style would improve. So far ... not.