The Wounded Land
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Cover of The Wounded Land |
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Author | Stephen R. Donaldson |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | The Second Chronicles of Thomas Covenant |
Genre(s) | Fantasy novel |
Publisher | Del Rey |
Released | 1980 |
Media type | Print (Hardback & Paperback) |
Pages | 512 pp |
ISBN | ISBN 0-345-34868-0 (USA paperback) |
Preceded by | The Power that Preserves |
Followed by | The One Tree |
The Wounded Land is the first book of the second trilogy of The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever fantasy series written by Stephen R. Donaldson. It is followed by The One Tree.
[edit] Plot summary
Ten years have passed since the end of the first Chronicles. After his experiences in the Land, Thomas Covenant has resumed his career as a writer. He is still isolated from society, but he has come to terms with that and with the other mental and physical consequences of his leprosy.
The story begins by presenting us with a new main character. Linden Avery is a doctor who has moved to Covenant's hometown to take a position at the local hospital. A traumatic childhood has left her emotionally isolated from other people to a degree that makes her as much an outsider in society as Covenant, albeit in a different way.
The chief of staff at the hospital (who also appears briefly in the first Chronicles) asks her to check up on Covenant. Linden does, reluctantly, and finds that Covenant's estranged wife has returned to him, but that she is under the influence of a cult of worshippers of Lord Foul, who has found a way to exert his influence in Covenant's world.
After Covenant is possibly mortally wounded by one of Foul's dupes, he loses consciousness and hears a familiar voice: Lord Foul's. Taunting Covenant that there is "more despair bound up for you than your petty mortal heart can bear", Foul vows that he will have his final revenge on Covenant and the Land.
He awakes to find that both he and Linden have been transported to the Land. His wound has been healed - somehow Covenant was able to use the "wild magic" of his white gold ring to do it, although he had no conscious control over the process. Descending from the mountains at the Land's south frontier, he also finds that a terrible change has transpired: four thousand years have passed, the Earthpower is gone, or nearly gone, and the people of the Land are out of touch with what remains of it. The Land is afflicted with the Sunbane, a disruption of the physical order which alternately causes rain, desert, pestilence and unnatural fertility to wreak havoc on man, animals and nature.
The people of the Land have turned to human sacrifice as a means of harnessing the power of the Sunbane: shortly after their arrival, Covenant and Linden are taken prisoner and condemned to be "shed". They escape, but shortly thereafter Covenant is bitten by a monster. Linden, who has become imbued with a form of clairvoyance which allows her to perceive the fundamental nature of people and things in this world (which, with her medical training, she comes to think of as her "health-sense") is able to save Covenant from a life-threatening infection, but the venom from the bite leaves Covenant unable to control the destructive power of the wild magic.
Despite these difficulties, Covenant and Linden Avery join with Sunder and Hollian, a man and woman of the Land, to travel to Revelstone to challenge the corrupt new rulers of the Land, the Clave. On the journey, Covenant meets with the Forestal Caer Caveral (formerly Warmark Hile Troy) and the spirits of the long-dead characters of the First Chronicles, who provide him with rather cryptic advice concerning the plight of the Land. Saltheart Foamfollower gives Covenant something more: Vain, a creation of the Ur-Viles, who accompanies Covenant to Revelstone. (Linden, Sunder, and Hollian have already been captured by the Clave and imprisoned there.) Once there, Covenant agrees to undertake a soothtell, a ritual of divination by blood. Before Covenant can defend himself the Clave's minions open his veins: this triggers the ritual. Covenant thus discovers that the cause of the current condition of the Land is the destruction of the Staff of Law, which he himself had wrought. Without the strength of the Staff to protect it, the Earthpower itself has been corrupted by Lord Foul, hence the Sunbane.
Covenant also discovers that the leader of the Clave, the na-Mhoram, is a Raver, one of Lord Foul's immortal, incorporeal servants. As each new na-Mhoram succeeds the last, the Raver takes possession, ensuring that the Clave continues to maintain the Banefire which strengthens the Sunbane. The Banefire is fed by copious quantities of blood: among the victims held by the Clave for future sacrifice are a group of Haruchai, the descendants of the race which formerly served the Land as the Bloodguard. Covenant frees the Bloodguard and his friends but, due to his power-madness combined with his blood loss, is unable to singlehandedly battle the combined power of the Clave, and thus is forced to leave Revelstone.
Revelstone is located at the western limit of the Land; beyond is only mountainous wastes. Hence, Covenant sets out east. As they approach the seacoast at the eastern edge of the Land, the travellers encounter a party of Giants, of the same race as Foamfollower's long-dead people. Covenant, Avery, Vain, and four of the Haruchai take ship with the Giants in search of a solution to the matter of the Staff of Law, leaving Sunder and Hollian in the Land to try to gather resistance to the Clave in preparation for the final battle.
[edit] External links
The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever |
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Novels |
The First Chronicles: Lord Foul's Bane | The Illearth War | The Power that Preserves |
The Second Chronicles: The Wounded Land | The One Tree | White Gold Wielder |
The Last Chronicles: The Runes of the Earth | Fatal Revenant | Against All Things Ending | The Last Dark |