Tide Child Trilogy
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The ''Tide Child'' trilogy is a series of fantasy novels by
R. J. Barker R. J. Barker (or, RJ Barker) is a British author of fantasy literature. He is best known for his ''Wounded Kingdom'' trilogy and the ''Tide Child'' trilogy. Career Barker is from Leeds, England. He played in a band for many years before realizi ...
. It comprises ''The Bone Ships'' (2019), ''Call of the Bone Ships'' (2020), and ''The Bone Ship's Wake'' (2021). The first book in the trilogy won the 2020 British Fantasy Award for Best Novel.


Plot


Prior to ''The Bone Ships''

The Hundred Isles and the Gaunt Isles have been at war for centuries. Because the Scattered Archipelago contains very little plant life and no wood for ships, their warships are made from the bones of sea dragons called arakeesians. The arakeesians are apparently extinct. No more ships can be built, leading to a war of attrition. White ships are used in traditional battles, while black ships are crewed by condemned prisoners expected to die in battle. The Hundred Isles has a
matriarchal Matriarchy is a social system in which positions of power and privilege are held by women. In a broader sense it can also extend to moral authority, social privilege, and control of property. While those definitions apply in general English, ...
society in which citizens are valued for fertility and beauty. Women who survive childbirth and bear healthy children are elevated to Bern class. Healthy men may become Kept concubines by the Bern, but those with birth defects or other undesirable traits are relegated to lower
castes A caste is a fixed social group into which an individual is born within a particular system of social stratification: a caste system. Within such a system, individuals are expected to marry exclusively within the same caste (endogamy), foll ...
. The firstborn healthy child from each family is sacrificed, and their soul is used to make a “corpse light” to light a white ship.


''The Bone Ships''

Joron Twiner is the son of a poor fisherman and is considered to be from a weak bloodline. Joron kills a man in a duel to avenge his father’s death. The man’s father, Kept Indyl Karrad, has Joron sentenced to serve as the shipwife (captain) of the black ship ''Tide Child''. Aboard ''Tide Child'', Joron spends most of his time drinking. “Lucky” Meas Gilbryn is the disgraced daughter of Thirteenbern Gilbryn, leader of the Hundred Isles. She wins command of ''Tide Child'' in a duel; Joron becomes her Deckkeeper, or second-in-command. ''Tide Child'' is badly damaged during a battle with raiders. He sails to Bernshulme, capital of the Hundred Isles, for repairs. In Bernshulme, Karrad reveals that a living arakeesian has been spotted. Karrad and Meas both want to end the war with the Gaunt Islanders, though for different reasons. They plan to escort the arakeesian to a remote section of ocean and kill it so that the bones cannot be used to create more ships. ''Tide Child'' obtains a shipment of crossbow bolts, poisoned with "hiyl", with which to kill the creature. Meas assembles a crew of criminals, bodyguards, sailors from her previous ship, and a gullaime, a humanoid bird-like creature who can control the wind. Karrad sends a spy named Dinyl Kiveth to become part of the crew; Dinyl and Joron become friends and eventually lovers. During a fight with raiders, the gullaime exhausts its supply of energy and becomes “windsick”, falling into a coma. Raiders hold control of towers on both Arkannis Isle and Skearith’s Spine, a mountain range that divides the Gaunt Isles and Hundred Isles. ''Tide Child's'' crew lands on the island. The gullaime is recharged by the island’s windspire. It assists ''Tide Child's'' crew with destroying the towers, allowing the arakeesian to continue its journey unharmed. After touching the windspire, Joron develops a supernatural connection to the gullaime. ''Tide Child'' is chased by ''Hag's Hunter'', a white ship captained by Meas’s sister Kyrie. ''Tide Child'' is defeated, but the arakeesian sinks ''Hag’s Hunter'' before Meas can surrender. Dinyl tries to kill the arakeesian but Joron cuts off his hand, destroying their relationship. The gullaime tells the crew that more arakeesians will appear. Meas refuses to kill it, stating that her goals have changed. Meas orders the poisoned bolts to be dumped overboard, and the arakeesian swims away unharmed.


''Call of the Bone Ships''

''Tide Child'' rescues a merchant ship. The crew find its hold full of human and gullaime slaves. The enslaved gullaime are Windshorn, with no magical abilities. ''Tide Child'' receives word that Safe Harbor, the peace faction’s primary hideout, has been destroyed by Thirteenbern Gilbryn. Joron leads an assault on Safe Harbor to rescue the surviving prisoners. Joron learns that more arakeesians have appeared; the slaves are being killed in order to manufacture hiyl. Meas leaves the ship in Joron’s command while she receives information from Indyl Karrad. With Dinyl’s help, Joron and the crew fight off a mutiny. Cwell, the mutiny’s leader, becomes Joron’s bodyguard. ''Tide Child'' journeys to a slave trader’s island in search of their captured allies. They find a Windshorn named Madorra. They avoid an ambush and hijack the slavers’ ship, ''Keesian Tooth''. In the process, Joron sings and summons an arakeesian which destroys the island. The arakeesian’s wake causes massive waves; in the chaos, Joron is injured and eventually has his leg amputated. Madorra tells Joron that he is a Caller and the ship’s gullaime is the Windseer, a figure that will save the gullaime by bringing about an apocalypse. It also tells the crew of ''Tide Child'' that the survivors from Safe Harbor were taken to Slatehulme. Joron pilots ''Keesian Tooth'' to Slatehulme. Dinyl’s ship is destroyed by Slatehulme’s
mangonel The mangonel, also called the traction trebuchet, was a type of trebuchet used in Ancient China starting from the Warring States period, and later across Eurasia by the 6th century AD. Unlike the later counterweight trebuchet, the mangonel was ...
, and he is killed. Meas and Joron rescue the surviving prisoners from Safe Harbor. Slatehulme is besieged by Hundred Isles ships; they believe that Meas is the Caller. In exchange for Meas's surrender, the Hundred Isles ships allow the remaining members of the peace faction to leave the island. Joron assumes control of the fleet and becomes the temporary shipwife of ''Tide Child''.


''The Bone Ship's Wake''

One year later, Joron leads a fleet of pirate ships allied with the Gaunt Isles. He allows ships from the Hundred Isles to escape with the rotting carcass of an arakeesian. This sparks a plague, devastating the population of Bernshulme. ''Tide Child'' is pursued by Hundred Isles ships. Joron sails his ship into a fog bank filled with icebergs. An arakeesian arrives, saving the ship. Rumors that Joron summoned the arakeesian begin to circulate, putting Meas’s life in danger. Joron uses the pirate fleet to draw Thirteenbern Gilbryn’s attention while sneaking into Bernshulme. Joron confronts the Thirteenbern, and he realizes that she believes Meas to be dead. Indyl Karrad reveals that Meas is alive and is his prisoner. He overthrows the Thirteenbern and has her hanged. Joron and Meas escape back to ''Tide Child''. Joron learns that all gullaime Windtalkers are female, and all Windshorn are male. Medora is holding the Windseer’s egg hostage. Joron rescues the Windseer’s egg, allowing her to kill Medora. Karrad pursues ''Tide Child''. Meas’s fleet is betrayed and flanked by the Gaunt Islands fleet. Joron and the Windseer summon arakeesians. The Windseer opens a path through the North Storm, which is the furthest border of the Scattered Archipelago. Joron and the Windseer sacrifice themselves to close the path, destroying their enemies and saving their fleet. Years later, the descendants of the survivors tell the story of Joron and Meas.


Style

''The Bone Ships'' is written entirely from the point of view of Joron Twiner.


Reception

''The Bone Ships'' won the 2020
British Fantasy Award The British Fantasy Awards (BFA) are awarded annually by the British Fantasy Society (BFS), first in 1976. Prior to that they were known as The August Derleth Fantasy Awards (see August Derleth Award). First awarded in 1972 (to ''The Knight of ...
for best novel. ''Publishers Weekly'' gave a positive review to the first novel in the trilogy, comparing it favorably to the works of
Patrick O'Brian Patrick O'Brian (12 December 1914 – 2 January 2000), born Richard Patrick Russ, was an English novelist and translator, best known for his Aubrey–Maturin series. These sea novels are set in the Royal Navy during the Napoleonic Wars and ...
and calling it a "very promising beginning" to the trilogy. Writing for ''Locus Magazine'', Liz Bourke praised ''The Bone Ships'' for its characterization, well-written battle scenes, and worldbuilding. She did, however, note issues with the logistics of the novel's
food supply chain A supply chain is a complex logistics system that consists of facilities that convert raw materials into finished products and distribute them to end consumers or end customers, while supply chain management deals with the flow of goods in distr ...
. Megan Leigh of the British Fantasy Society felt that Joron was a "bland" protagonist, comparing him to
Nick Carraway Nick Carraway () is a fictional character and narrator in F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel ''The Great Gatsby''. The character is a Yale University alumnus from the American Midwest, a World veteran, and a newly arrived resident of West Egg on ...
from ''
The Great Gatsby ''The Great Gatsby'' () is a 1925 novel by American writer F. Scott Fitzgerald. Set in the Jazz Age on Long Island, near New York City, the novel depicts first-person narrator Nick Carraway's interactions with Jay Gatsby, a mysterious mi ...
'' in the sense that both characters are observers rather than drivers of the plot. However, she called the novel "delightful and refreshing", particularly praising the novel's worldbuilding and the character of the gullaime. Eloise Hopkins of the British Fantasy Society wrote that the worldbuilding of ''The Bone Ships'' was "well-developed down to the last intricate detail". Eloise Hopkins stated that ''Call of the Bone Ships'' had "solidly crafted" dialogue and worldbuilding. She also stated that the inclusion of maps, illustrations, and sea ballads contributed to the novel's credibility. ''Publishers Weekly'' gave ''Call of the Bone Ships'' a positive review, praising the development of its "fascinating personal concerns" as well as the "awe-inspiring set pieces" of its action sequences. ''Publishers Weekly'' gave a starred review to the final book of the trilogy, writing that ''The Bone Ship's Wake'' combines Patrick O'Brian's seafaring action sequences with Wagner's "operatic
sturm und drang (, ; usually translated as "storm and stress") was a proto-Romanticism, Romantic movement in German literature and Music of Germany, music that occurred between the late 1760s and early 1780s. Within the movement, individual subjectivity an ...
".


Footnotes


References

{{reflist Novels about dragons Fantasy novel trilogies Nautical novels Novels set at sea British fantasy novel series