Etched in Bone
Anne Bishop
Etched in Bone is the fifth novel in Anne Bishop's The Others urban fantasy series, and is kind of an end. It concludes the story of Meg Corbyn, the young woman who ran away from a slave compound where she was confined so that her blood prophecy gift could be exploited and sold. She found refuge at the Lakeside Courtyard, an enclave where werewolves, vampires, and bird shapeshifters govern themselves, and where Human Law Does Not Apply. She insinuated herself into this fierce community, with the result that, by the end of the fourth novel, Marked in Flesh, nearly a dozen humans have a cooperative relationship with the Lakeside Courtyard.
This relationship became important when a movement of profoundly stupid humans (Humans First and Last, HFL) decided it would be a smart idea to make war on the terra indigene and take over the lands they control. That war was the subject of Marked in Flesh. HFL was wiped out, and the terra indigene are now considering the question "How much human will we keep?" That they are considering any answer other than "None" is thanks to Meg and her human friends' relationship with the Lakeside Courtyard.
Thus, in Etched in Bone the war is over, but the question of human/Others relationships is still wide open. In particular, Meg's relationship with Simon, the werewolf leader of the Lakeside courtyard, is still unresolved.
The story starts off slowly, with a bunch of subplots that are not, to my mind, really relevant to the central conflict, taking up our attention. For instance, a lot of time is spent on the matter of finding humans to work in the western town of Bennett. You could delete this entire matter from the book with no effect on the rest.
The plot kicks into high gear in the last quarter of the book. An evil person tries to win personal advantages by exploiting the Lakeside Courtyard. This is important to us, not just because of the harm he does to Courtyard characters we know and love such as Meg and Simon, but also because the Lakeside Courtyard is being monitored by the terra indigene to answer that question, "How much human will we keep?" It is therefore important for all Namid's humans that evil be defeated.
The last quarter of the book was very good. The first three quarters, however, could have been improved. There are more novels in The Others, and I will continue reading. Etched in Bone is, however, the end of the Meg Corbyn story arc.
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