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Ombria in Shadow

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Ombria is a place heaped with history -- and secrets. There is a buried city beneath it inhabited by ghosts, accessible only through magical passages and long-forgotten doorways. When the Prince of Ombria dies suddenly, his wicked great-aunt Domina Pearl seizes power by becoming regent to the prince's young son, Kyel. Minutes after the prince's death, Domina kicks Lydea, the prince's longtime mistress, out into the streets to die. But she is saved by a strange girl named Mag, a supposed waxling created by a powerful sorceress who lives underneath the city. With the help of Mag and the prince's bastard nephew, a strange, silver-eyed man obsessed with drawing, Lydea tries to save Kyel and somehow defeat Domina.

298 pages, Paperback

First published January 8, 2002

About the author

Patricia A. McKillip

90 books2,715 followers
Patricia Anne McKillip was an American author of fantasy and science fiction. She wrote predominantly standalone fantasy novels and has been called "one of the most accomplished prose stylists in the fantasy genre". Her work won many awards, including the World Fantasy Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2008.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 356 reviews
Profile Image for mark monday.
1,784 reviews5,754 followers
December 22, 2011
this is a beautiful, dreamy fantasy. it is about a fallen city, the mysterious city under that city, two magical beings, a royal bastard, a cast-out mistress, a kind of changeling, a curious scholar, a lonely child prince. it is about ruthless control and equally ruthless revolution against that control. although it does not have faerie, it is a fairy tale, one that is both modern and classic in tone and structure. the writing is splendid; McKillip's words are like gems that she strings together to make a sparkling kind of wonderful. she does not overwrite her story; her prose is lusciously rich, almost edible - but it is also streamlined, stripped-down, full of ambiguity and meaning yet never spelling things out too explicitly, never getting lost in detail. sometimes you have to step back, to appreciate the vivid beauty conveyed on the page, to wonder over the mysteries being so carefully teased out, piece by piece. the setting, the city of Ombria, is a marvel: a sad, gloomy, violent, desperately alive place, one that has fallen far from its glorious history; a sad, gloomy, mysteriously un-alive un-place, a shadow city beneath and between and co-existing with the living spaces of Ombria, an un-living history. Ombria in Shadow is full of magic, tragedy, mystery, and love.

MAGIC: it is front and center. don't expect rules to this magic, although it doesn't feel random. it is simply not spelled out. it is as ambiguous and mythic as the rest of the tale. its two sorceresses - one a fell and fungal villain of the darkest hues and the other an unsettling force of nature, change, and potential catastrophe - are marvelous creations.

TRAGEDY: there are the central tragedies, of course, the greater ones that dominate the narrative. but McKillip does an excellent job in making the tragedy hurt beyond those larger strokes, beyond the death of a king, beyond the attempted murders, beyond the ruination of a city. she makes the tragedy felt in many small ways... casual violence in the night, the distance between father and daughter, lovers parted and lost, the feeling of disempowerment, the loneliness of a little boy.

MYSTERY: answers are almost always tantalizingly out of reach, parsed out little by little, nothing ever simply dumped on the reader. the ending gives you answers, but they are not straightforward, they require contemplation and a willingness to forsake easy answers and easy satisfaction. when they come, the answers were almost as mysterious as the mysteries themselves. that said, when the riddles of the nature of the two sorceresses were finally answered, separately... marvelous to read, perfect.

LOVE: my gosh i was delighted about the Love that is at the heart of this tale. specifically, the love between children and those people in their lives who love them and care for them - be they parents or friends or guardians. of course i have nothing against Romantic Love and its place in any story. but how refreshing to have that focus changed! there are Love Stories in Ombria, naturally. but this book has at its heart Familial Love - with "family" being one that is both born and chosen.

this is the kind of book that you just want to hold close to your heart, be sentimental over, and think about again... but perhaps not talk about, at least not too much. it is a delicate book, like most precious things.
Profile Image for Bradley.
Author 5 books4,537 followers
April 12, 2020
I would recommend this book to people who really enjoyed Peake's Titus Groan or the whole line of the Gormenghast novels. Both are slow, gothic, and obsessed with language and timing.

There were some quite beautiful passages and overall, I did enjoy the story. It wasn't my favorite KIND of story, however, and I wasn't always as engaged in the tale of the magical usurper/regent and her charges as I probably should have been. It was a case of the details carrying the weight of the plot more than the characters.

I can definitely see why quite a few people fell in love with this, however. It brings Fantasy back to the old days where kingdoms were besieged from within. Where history is more of a villain (or something else) than anything.

I think it's pretty well designed to be a quiet, thoughtful read.

Me, however... I didn't really get into it as much as it probably deserves, having won the World Fantasy Award.
Profile Image for A. Dawes.
186 reviews59 followers
September 4, 2016
Patricia A. Mckillip is a writer with a rare command of rhythm. There's a poetic feel to her work, almost like gentle waves lapping away.

Ombria in Shadow is one of McKillip's adult works. The novel showcases McKillip's talents to an extent unseen in her other stories. McKillip's world building in Ombria in Shadow has the complexities of the most complicated works relating to thrones and power struggles in literature.
McKillip has made the city itself into a wondrous character. Ombria has the unique taste of renaissance Italy. It is a place layered in history, but also Byzantine deceit and deception. And there is a city beneath the city, like in Gaiman's Neverwhere, but this city is inhabited by spirits and accessible only to a few who know its secret ways.

The story itself is something the Borgias would be envious of. The Prince dies suddenly, and the power hungry and suitably wicked great aunt Domina Pearl seizes power as the regent. The protagonist and the deceased prince's lover, Lydea, is tossed out into the alleyways. Yet an unusual girl called Mag, who may even be a waxling product of socrcery, saves Lydea from the evil of the streets. Lydea unravels truths and mistruths, as together, she and Mag set to battle Domina and restore justice to Ombria.

This is a superb novel. I've always loved McKillip but Ombria's renaissance multi-layered world has made me admire her even more so.

Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Jersy.
1,000 reviews110 followers
April 30, 2022
This was somewhere between classic and modern fantasy, or like classic fantasy with a more modern touch.

There was a mysterious, dream- or fairy tale like atmosphere, the setting is an essential part of the story and the characters are interesting, but not as characterized in detail as I´m used to from more modern works. I feel both the detachment from the characters as well as the story´s lack of a clear focus are what kept me from loving this. The story doesn’t feel muddled, however there isn’t a certain plan or situation the characters are in for a majority of the story, so it never felt like I was settled into the “actual” plot. There is more of a constant flow from one development to the next, especially for Lydea.

I liked how full of mysteries and creative ideas this is. Especially everything around the sorceress Faey really intrigued me. The setting as a whole was very atmospheric and fascinating, and the writing is both pretty and effective. It worked really well in the audio book. I also liked the theme of history and the tales that remain from it.
Profile Image for Tijana.
844 reviews244 followers
Read
June 4, 2024
Bože, zašto ova knjiga nije postojala kad sam ja imala trinaest godina??! Ovo je doslovno sve što bi jedna pristojna trinaestogodišnjakinja od fentezija poželeti mogla. Bajne deve u nevolji, romantični tmurni kopilani, zle babe veštice, moćne čarobnice iz podzemlja i njihove čupave šegrtice dobrog srca. Slikoviti magični zamak u slikovitom magičnom gradu i podzemlje koje je istovremeno i vremensko podzemlje, odnosno prošlost tog grada. Ali pre svega i posle svega: autentični doživljaj čarolije kao nečeg nestvarnog, snolikog i beskrajno promenljivog; ovo je fantastika koju ste kao mali mogli nejasno zamišljati ako se nagledate Lavirinta i Legende u kombinaciji s već nekom varijantom Najlepših bajki sveta.
U poređenju s "Ombrijom u senci", postaje jasno koliko se većina savremenih autora fantastike prema svom odabranom žanru ponaša kao da pišu činjenično zasnovane istorijske romane: sve mora da bude realistično, iako realizam najčešće staje kod naziva delova oklopa; magija ide na kap; zmajevski metabolizam mora da dobije paranaučno objašnjenje iako će biti zagarantovano blesavo i neuverljivo; ne daj bože da jezik negde blesne smelom metaforom. U Ombriji u senci... nije tako, i ni na sekund nema pretvaranja da se likovi nalaze, vole i bore u nekom nama sličnom modusu postojanja. Nižu se začudne i prelepe jezičke slike, uvek negde na granici sa onim pozorišnim vilinskim kostimima od jeftinog satena, tila i štrasa, ali nekako uvek - kao u uspeloj predstavi - magija proradi i drži čitaoce.
Nemam nekako snage da objasnim kako ovde bajkovita kič estetika neironično funkcioniše. Funkcioniše kao u Čarobnoj fruli, eto vam.

I moram reći, bez spojlera, da sam samim krajem nezadovoljna, jeste to bila rano najavljena mogućnost ali svejedno spada u manje prihvatljive kategorije završetka fantastičnog narativa. Ima smisla, dobro je sprovedeno, sve je to lepo, ali ipak!...
Profile Image for Jordan West.
198 reviews151 followers
September 6, 2018
McKillip is one of those authors I've been ignoring my entire life, having long-ago assumed that her work consisted of wispy fantasies for adolescents about bonding with unicorns and the like; fortunately, I encountered Mark Monday's review of this, a singularly ethereal and otherworldly novel, and quickly changed some assumptions. The words 'dreamlike' and 'gothic' are used repeatedly to describe this book, and these are quite apropos: McKillip's Ombria, a mixture of Gormenghast and Viriconium, is one of the great metropolises of fantastic literature; surrounded by and connected to its shadow-self where the entire past of the city exists simultaneously, a labyrinth of secret passages and forgotten rooms occupied by ghosts and fragments of memory, a sort of wonderland of ruins. Although many of the elements here verge on the archetypal, McKillip infuses these with an aura of mystery and the uncanny that removes them from the realm of the familiar and makes magic genuinely magical, resulting in a most unique book that deserves to be in the company of Crowley, Beagle, and Tanith Lee.
Profile Image for Phoenixfalls.
147 reviews82 followers
March 11, 2010
All of McKillip's novels are beautiful. Her exquisite prose and her ability to capture the sense of magic (both light and dark) that imbues traditional fairy tales ensures that any novel she writes will tantalize and delight. Her style is deliciously archaic, even baroque, and she has a habit of giving the reader the bare minimum of information to make the plot and motivations of her characters understandable, tingeing every action with the spice of mystery. This has worked not very well in some novels -- I found the climax of In the Forests of Serre near-incomprehensible -- but even when the mystery isn't working her novels are delightful confections designed to be savored.

Ombria in Shadow is McKillip at her best -- a dark chocolate truffle, rich and beguiling. The city of Ombria, with its decaying streets, and its shadows that bleed into the underworld of its past, and its hints that there is yet another shadow city that may overlay Ombria itself, is the most breathtakingly beautiful McKillip creation I have encountered since I read Alphabet of Thorn (my first McKillip, though published two years later -- clearly McKillip was on a hot streak). The cast of characters is just as good, each one three-dimensional and bowed (but not broken) by heartbreak. And the central mystery, of how the city will cope with the loss of its prince in an already uncertain time, is always enticingly just out of reach until the climax, when strand after strand of the plot comes together in a breathless resolution that answers a host of questions and raises a dozen more, but which is still entirely satisfying on a visceral level. The denouement is quietly wonderful, granting the happy ending that seemed hopeless in a most unexpectedly melancholic way.

All in all, I don't think I could have loved this book any more.
Profile Image for Nicky.
4,138 reviews1,087 followers
April 30, 2015
I love all of McKillip’s work, as least so far. She can really manage enchantment: her Ombria is a strange world, decaying and bright, mysterious and intriguing. There’s a lot going on here: the magic behind Faey and her waxling, the magic behind Domina Pearl, Ducon’s father and Mag’s origins… And there’s characters you can’t help but care about: Kyel, so alone; Lydea, who loves him; Ducon, the bastard son with no designs upon the throne, who spends his time drawing, searching, learning the city and seeing it in ways others can’t. And the details, like Lydea’s bitten fingernails, the charcoal stains Ducon leaves on the bedsheets so everyone knows where he’s been sleeping and when.

And of course, the hidden passageways, the secrets, the two worlds side by side.

It cast its spell very quickly over me; McKillip writes beautifully, of course, and that itself is kind of mesmerising.

Towards the ending — perhaps the last twenty pages — I was less sure of what was going on. It might pull itself together more on a reread, I’m not sure, but I was left not quite knowing who knew what was happening, who understood what, why certain things changed and others didn’t (or if they didn’t change, but people acted like they had to make things easier). I have that feeling with McKillip’s work a lot, though, and it hasn’t deterred me from picking up more.

Originally posted here.
Profile Image for Beth.
229 reviews
May 8, 2021
Ombria in Shadow is one of two books by McKillip that won the World Fantasy Award, the other being The Forgotten Beasts of Eld, which I read a few years ago. It is set in the city of Ombria,  where the prince has just died and his great-aunt, Domina Pearl, is acting as regent for the prince's young son Kyel. Lydea takes refuge in her father's tavern and receives mysterious help from a girl named Mag, who serves the sorceress Faey. Ducon, the dead prince's nephew (and Kyel's cousin), whose charcoal drawings depict the otherworldly counterpart of Ombria; the shadow city. Lydea, Mag, and Ducon are the main viewpoint characters. This book has much more plot than The Forgotten Beasts of Eld; I wouldn't called it fast-paced but it's certainly intricate. There's no obvious single protagonist, but the characters are all interesting, and Domina Pearl is a wonderfully haunting villain. The ending is satisfying, which wasn't the case for me in Alphabet of Thorn and possibly The Bell at Sealey Head, although I don't remember that second one well enough to say why.

What really stands out in this book is the setting. The mysterious city of Ombria was great, maybe the most interesting setting that I've read from McKillip so far. I think I like this better than The Bell at Sealey Head although since that one is similarly intensely focused on a small setting, I'm now wondering how it would compare if I read it again. I'll probably read more by this author, but I'm not sure which book to read.

The writing is beautiful; here are some of my favorite bits:
"Faey lived, for those who knew how to find her, within Ombria's past. Parts of the city's past lay within time's reach, beneath the streets in great old limestone tunnels: the hovels and mansions and sunken river that Ombria shrugged off like a forgotten skin, and buried beneath itself through the centuries..."

"There was the gaudy patch of sunflowers beside the west gate of the palace of the Prince of Ombria, that did nothing all day long but turn their golden-haired, thousand-eyed faces to follow the sun."

"Mag had learned to move through the streets like a musician moved through music, tuning it note by note with every breath, every touch. A rough voice in the dark could render her invisible; at a touch, she was simply gone, up a pipe, down a barrel, down deeper than that, through a shadow or a door. Not being human, she never wondered at what humans did. She had seen them pilfer each other’s watches, slit each other’s throats, break each other’s hearts. She had seen newborns tossed away with yesterday’s rubbish. She had stepped over men snoring drunk on the cobbles; she had walked around women with bleeding faces, slumped in rich, torn gowns, weeping and cursing in tavern alleys. Since she was wax, none of this concerned her; they might have been dreams or ghosts she moved through, until they tried to pull her into their night-terrors."
Profile Image for etherealacademia.
165 reviews253 followers
March 10, 2024
I need to read more of this author— this was a beautiful, dreamlike story unlike anything I’ve ever encountered. Highly, highly recommend to anyone who likes literary fantasy, books about hidden worlds, and complex characters.
Profile Image for Althea Ann.
2,250 reviews1,142 followers
September 28, 2013
Recipient of McKillip's second World Fantasy Award... and well-deservedly so.

This is definitely one of McKillip's best (does she have a worst? - I don't think so!)
Here, McKillip introduces us to Ombria - a city of shadows and secrets, labyrinthine palaces and alleys, intrigues and magic... Ombria is somewhere between Gormenghast and Tanith Lee's Paradys... that fantasy city that we all dream of (but might not want to actually live in!)

Although the other McKillip book I read recently (Winter Rose) was a quiet story, more involved with emotion than action, this book is action-packed, with murders, sword-fights, desperate flights and pursuits, etc..
At the outset, we meet Lydea, mistress of a prince who has recently been killed in a palace intrigue. The regent to the child heir (Kyel), a viciously conniving old hag known as Domina Pearl, throws Lydea out on the street in all her finery, hoping she will be killed by some cutthroat mugger.

However, Lydea survives, with the help of a mysterious young girl, Mag, who may or may not be human - she is servant to a sorceress, Faye, who lives in the underworlds below the city, who claims that she created Mag from wax, and gave her life, golem-like.

Lydea wishes nothing more than to somehow return to the palace and somehow save the young heir, whom she loves like a son, from the clutches of the regent - but, working in disgrace at her father's tavern, she can see no way to do so.

But Mag has been discovering a mind of her own, and doesn't wholly approve of the poisons and spells that her mistress has been purveying - especially those that have been going to the regent, for her nefarious uses.

And in the palace, plots are afoot to put a young lordling, Ducon, upon the throne. But he would much rather wander the streets of Ombria, living the life of an artist. Will he agree to assassinate his royal cousin? Is the only one young Kyel is safe with his history-obsessed tutor, Camas? Or does Camas care more about his researches into the ancient legends that surround Ombria? ...rumors of a shadow city, of mysterious shifts and transformations....

The story has a rather unexpected ending - and one that some people didn't really agree with - but I thought it really worked, and made sense with clues proffered throughout the story... can't really say more without spoilers!

A wonderful book...
Profile Image for idiomatic.
540 reviews16 followers
July 21, 2022
lusciously gorgeous and half-comprehensible, that's the classic fantasy GOODS
Profile Image for Abigail Hartman.
Author 2 books48 followers
July 28, 2018
This is my fourth McKillip novel (I read the Harpist trilogy first), and in each of them I often struggled to understand what was going on. Her writing is so lyrical, so poetic, that I don't always follow what it's saying. People move around and I can't follow how they got from point a to point b. A plot point develops, a mystery is raised or resolved, and I don't understand what the character just figured out. I generally like it, and the writing is often clever and lovely, if sometimes paradoxically detached; but I'm also repeatedly left making Bertie Wooster faces and saying, "huh?"

With "Ombria," this struggle to understand the narrative made it equally hard to care about the characters for roughly the first half of the book. I just didn't understand what was going on, and had no special investment in any of the people. Around the halfway mark, reached on a plane with little other reading material to hand, this changed; I was interested in the plot and wanted to know what would happen, and was actually willing to pick the book up (I'd laid it aside for a while before then). I still didn't adore any of the characters, but they did interest me, and that's something. I wasn't really ever a tremendous fan of Ducon, but did like the drawings: McKillip's conceptions of magic are fabulous. The relationship between Lydea and Kyel was well-crafted, although it was in Faey and Mag that I was most invested: I very much liked the relationship between the sorceress and her waxling.

As for the plot -- Ombria and the shadow city -- I was still left going "huh?" It was the same issue I had with the final Harpist book: facts are revealed to characters without being fully articulated to the reader, and I'm left halfway in the dark. My conclusion is that McKillip's writing is just too clever for me. Other people seem to understand it fine. XD
Profile Image for Mohammed  Abdikhader  Firdhiye .
422 reviews4 followers
April 25, 2015
I was slightly disappointed with this novel and almost gave it 2 stars.

The writing,prose style impressed at times very much but the story was lacking something until the last dozen pages and the characters was a bit thin,not so intresting except Mag,Faey.
Next i want to read one of her Fantasy Masterworks books to really judge if she is to my taste or not. Her prose that seemed full of spark,style lost its lustre because i didnt feel for the story until it was too late.
Profile Image for L'encre de la magie .
333 reviews145 followers
June 2, 2022
Avis Lecture 🧐📖 "Les Fantômes d'Ombria", Patricia Mckillip 💕

🏆 World Fantasy Award 2003, Mythopoeic 2003 et Prix Imaginales 2006 du meilleur roman étranger.

Le 6 mai dernier, une autre grande dame nous a quitté. Mckillip fait partie de mes auteurices chouchou, alors même que je n'ai lu qu'une infime partie de ses romans. Ses univers oniriques et plein de douceurs m'ont toujours enchanté.

Finir un de ses romans, c'est comme sortir d'un rêve, ce moment de flou, entre deux mondes qui se chevauchent...
Et bien "Les Fantômes d'Ombria" c'est exactement ça !😁
Ce n'est pas mon préféré de l'autrice (à ce jour "Alphabet of Thorns"), mais j'y retrouve cette plume si enchanteresse et son inspiration très baroque. Difficile de résumer le récit, le 4eme de couverture même veut tout et rien dire à la fois. C'est une expérience de lecture que je vous laisserai découvrir.
Les amateurs de contes seront servis, on y retrouve tous les codes et les archétypes de personnages présents dans ce genre. Ainsi donc, vous retrouverez la Sorcière, le prince et la jeune fille MAIS et c'est là où le récit se démarque à mon sens, c'est cette ville d'Ombria et son reflet... Une ville qui devient personnage à mesure que les pages se tournent, une histoire de cités parallèles qui n'est pas sans me rappeler Gemina et Nihilo de Guillaume Chamanadjian. 💕

J'ai beaucoup aimé la dimension politique du récit, puisqu'il fait état de gouvernance et de régence. De même, j'ai trouvé les personnages très attachants.

Les Fantômes d'Ombria est une histoire d'équilibre entre le Bien et le Mal et bien que la thématique puisse paraître simpliste ainsi que sa construction proche du conte, sachez qu'il n'en est rien ! C'est un roman solide et étherique à fois... Profitez en, malheureusement les romans traduits de l' autrice se comptent sur les doigts d'une seule main... Et merci @editionsmnemos d'avoir rendu accessible ces romans ❤️
Profile Image for lasvamps.
207 reviews166 followers
July 27, 2021
Diciamo più un 3.75

E' davvero molto difficile per me scrivere questa recensione perché il libro mi è piaciuto e solitamente se una cosa mi piace molto tendo ad essere poco oggettiva.
Ho trovato questo libro nella sua traduzione italiana per puro caso, pur possedendo già inglese The forgotten beast of Eld che però non avevo ancora letto.

C'è da dire che vengo da un lungo periodo a pane e Marillier quindi le pecche le noto tutte e molto facilmente.
C'è tanto potenziale sprecato, materiale che potrebbe fornire pagine a iosa, perché tra le varie cose credo che uno dei problemi principali sia che il libro è troppo corto.
Forse essendo abituata a storie di minimo 350 pagine, 250 mi sono parse veramente poche per affrontare una storia in cui c'era un così temibile nemico, una maga al di fuori dello spazio e del tempo, una concubina in fuga, per non parlare della vera protagonista della storia abbandonata sullo sfondo, ovvero la città di Ombria.

Lo stile è poetico ed evocativo, mi ha ricordato un po' la Laini Taylor de Il sognatore, ma soprattuto quei vecchi film fantasy che guardavamo a Natale noi millenials tipo Fantaghirò o Sorellina e il principe del sogno, Desideria e l'anello del drago e via discorrendo.
Il libro mi è piaciuto ma sono ben consapevole che si poteva fare di meglio.

Cercherò di leggere quanto prima La maga di Eld (anche se in italiano è praticamente introvabile)
Profile Image for Michele.
644 reviews201 followers
June 15, 2020
Magical, almost dreamlike, with an excellently original premise.
Profile Image for Juushika.
1,661 reviews202 followers
December 30, 2022
Ombria teeters on the brink of destruction: a child ruler sits on the throne while a dangerous regent vies for power. But Ombria is a city of magic, of hidden doorways and underground sorceresses, and what seems to be her end may only be a transformation. McKillip's illustrative voice creates a fantastic sense of place intertwined with a deep, organic magic: an absorbing, unusual, superbly realized city, Ombria is the book's true protagonist. The characters which people it have melancholy depth and sympathetic troubled relationships; the plot which moves it is both finely knit and inevitable--the strange but natural outcome of the city's identity. But the climax has flaws: the city's fate knits up nicely but some character threads feel hastily knotted in, and the ending uses a trope I dislike: . But, while the characters have moments of crystalline resonance, while the plot has a beautiful denouement, don't read it for that. Read Ombria in Shadows for McKillip's lyrical writing and the shadowed, mournful, magical world which it evokes. It's not a flawless book but it is a remarkable one, and it was exactly what I wanted. I recommend it with enthusiasm.
Profile Image for Mely.
827 reviews24 followers
September 4, 2024
Ombria is a vaguely Renaissance city, full of strange and peculiar magics, not least the magic of McKillip's prose. Tyrants, witches, endangered princes, the brave inn-keeper's daughter who was the last prince's mistress, the loyal bastard, the clever witch's apprentice, and the magic of cities and histories, faces that always change and always remain the same. This is the most urban of McKillip's books, and it captures the essence of what I love about great cities: the sense that the city itself has a nature and that it shapes everyone who lives within it, no matter how separate from each other they may appear to be.

One of my favorite McKillips, for the messiness and confusion and complexity of the city, for the many-threaded history, even though I have mixed feelings about the final chapter.
Profile Image for Amanda.
840 reviews336 followers
August 21, 2015
McKillip is a beautiful writer. If this story doesn't pull you in within the first 50 pages, it is not going to change in the next 240, so you may want to try something else. I was impressed by the first 50 pages, and really liked the entire book. No predictable plot, the story felt meandering. Brief yet thorough characterizations. Seamless mix of "real world" and magical elements. Interesting, mysterious characters. Story of the perfect length. I'll be reading more McKillip.
Profile Image for Malum.
2,571 reviews159 followers
January 19, 2019
Pretty fun fantasy that has a very strong fairy tale feel. While a lot of the book can be a bit slow, the world that McKillip builds is fascinating enough to keep your attention.
Profile Image for A.G. Howard.
Author 18 books8,983 followers
April 26, 2019
This book was odd, but in the best possible way. The world building was fascinating, and as always, Ms McKillip's prose was beautiful.
Profile Image for Amrita Goswami.
309 reviews36 followers
October 14, 2021
3.5 stars

From the first page, readers are plunged into a strange shadowy world full of secrets and conspiracies, without warning. The lovely prose washed over me like music. Sometimes the meaning would strike me like lightning, with perfect clarity, and other times the words would lap over me in a diffuse mist of vague understanding. Reading this book is an experience. Characters are sketched in broad strokes, and familial love is the impetus motivating many of them.

Unfortunately, my one major gripe with the book is that Domina Pearl, who is the main villain of the piece, is such a stock evil character, with the typical garden-variety aspirations of Total Control and World Domination. Considering the nuanced prose, I expected more.

In fact, the plot of the book could probably have fit into ten pages, without the sumptuous dressing of the writing. The story is dense with imagery and clever metaphors, but its vague dreamy quality may not charm everyone.
Profile Image for Dasha.
135 reviews19 followers
March 28, 2024
I’ll be thinking about it for a while 🖤
Profile Image for Phoenix.
368 reviews15 followers
March 19, 2020
This is my second time reading this novel. The first was quite awhile back in high school, possibly a few years after it was first published in fact. My feelings more or less stay unchanged about it. I love the language and the dream-like ideas in this novel, even if it can get a bit vague at times plot-wise.

This novel on its second reading feels to me almost like Patricia A. Mckillip's explorations of fairy tales and how history and fiction are often entwined with one another. Many of the characters and themes in this novel are about half or mixed heritage and are caught between Ombria's parallel worlds. Lydea is caught between the court life she once knew as Royce Greve's mistress and her life as a tavern wench, Mag is caught between her life as Faey's "waxling" errand girl who knows something of Ombria's shadow city and her life as a human as she discovers by accident within the first few pages of the novel. Ducon is of "bastard" lineage and also strangely knowledgeable of the shadow city as well, making it his personal mission to document where shadow meets light and past meets present with his charcoal drawings. Even Kyel is someone who is not quite of one world or another, but in a different way: he is a Prince that as one reviewer on Publisher's Weekly's site notes "is too young to rule but old enough to feel the despair of those around him."

The opening pages of this novel have haunted me for years. I love how Lydea uses a trasnparent painted fan to illustrate the porous and fluid boundaries of Ombria's shadow/past and daytime/present selves. Ombria is perhaps the most important character of all, and similar to Erin Morgenstern's The Night Circus is the most effective tool Mckillip employs in this story about paradoxes and surreal magic.

It's hard for me to put into concise words what I love most about this novel, but it's easily one of the most memorable novels I've ever read. I'm always here for stories which aren't afraid to follow ponderous paths, that can sometimes be as quizzical as Faey's existence as a shape-changing sorceress is. Some might not like that Ombria in Shadow is a bit of riddle and not nearly as action-packed as more typical fantasy novels, but if you're looking for a fantasy novel that has a ghostly, mystical, and somewhat Gothic sort of air to it I'd highly recommend this to you.
Profile Image for Beth.
790 reviews350 followers
October 1, 2011
Having read almost all of McKillip's books, I have come to expect and enjoy a certain style. She has this minimal, vague, poetic way of writing, which I've come to love. Some of her novels are more vague than others (Winter Rose, The Tower at Stony Wood--I'm still not really sure what really happened in those), and Ombria in Shadow falls into the less vague category, but it's still full of McKillip's poetic, lyrical style.

Magic is something that character's in her novel deal with everyday, and while they are matter-of-fact about it, McKillip doesn't fail to instill wonder and beauty into that aspect of the story. In fact, magic is the breath and life of her novels, and that coupled with her style is what keeps me reading her work.

I really liked the characters of this novel. They were all very distinct, and, as I read more about them, I came to really care about them a lot. The city of Ombria was a character all it's own. I loved how the city had a twin, a mirror image almost, that was and wasn't the city itself. The shadow city and the "real" city overlap with each other. Is it a shadow city, the city of past, the city's underworld or all three? What are the mysterious transformations that color Ombria's past and how are they connected to the sorceress of the shadow city?

The ending...well, I haven't quite decided how I feel about it. I didn't mind that it was a quiet ending; although the previous chapter was somewhat tense, the ending didn't rush to a startling revelation or climax. It answered questions, but raised several as well, allowing the reader to come to their own conclusions. I don't know if any of her novels will ever replace Alphabet of Thorn or the Cygnet Duology at my favorites, but I definitely loved this one.
Profile Image for Maryanne.
Author 2 books25 followers
February 5, 2009
I'm only going to review this one book of Patricia McKillip's (ok, maybe one other). I think she is consistently underrated as a fantasy author, at least by me. I never think of her when I think about my favority fantasy writers, but she is wonderful. All of her books are amazing, bordering on mythology and legend, as though they were written in time immemorial and she just discovered and published them. This one in particular touched me deeply, even though (as often happens with her work) I almost didn't understand what really happened. I just know I was moved, awed, shaken... She is brilliant, and I don't think she even dwells on the same plane as the rest of us. Not all of her work is as good as this (see my ratings) but all of it aspires to the same high level, which is more than I can say for so many writers.
Profile Image for Isa.
564 reviews316 followers
January 2, 2017
The writing is beautiful, as with all other McKillip's works, however I couldn't get into the story.
I didn't manage to feel much of anything for the characters, and I found the plot boring...
Never thought I'd give less than 5 stars to one of McKillip's books, but here we are :/
Profile Image for Nik.
63 reviews8 followers
October 25, 2018
Leider habe ich eine gefühlte Ewigkeit für das Buch gebraucht, meine chronischen Leseflauten sind unberechenbar und machen auch vor Geschichten, die mir gefallen, keinen Halt. Durch die großen Abstände zwischen den einzelnen Leseabschnitten fällt eine detaillierte Rezension schwer. Ich kann allerdings so viel sagen, dass mir mein erster Roman von Patrica A. McKillip insbesondere sprachlich, aber auch atmosphärisch sehr gut gefallen hat, jedermanns Sache wird es aber nicht sein.

Die Welt in "Schatten über Ombria" ist düster, schwermütig und rätselhaft. Es gibt kein ausgiebiges Worldbuilding, stattdessen konzentriert sich die Autorin auf die Figuren und ihre Beziehungen, lässt sich die Charaktere langsam entwickeln und verzichtet auf episches Pathos und große Schlachten. Ihre ganze Herangehensweise erinnert mich an klassische Fantasy-Geschichten, in denen es noch nicht üblich war, Gesellschaftsmodelle und Verflechtungen diverser Adelshäuser zu konzipieren. Nicht, dass ich das nicht grundsätzlich mögen würde, aber dieser unbedingte Fokus auf die Charaktere und die düstere Grundstimmung haben mich, auch mit einer gewissen Nostalgie, sehr angesprochen.

Die Sprache des Originals kann ich nicht beurteilen, aber wenn der Übersetzer Hans Schütz auch nur einen Bruchteil von McKillips sprachlichen Fähigkeiten eingefangen hat, gehört sie immer noch zur Spitze dessen, was ich in dem Genre seit längerer Zeit gelesen habe (abseits von Pratchett).

Ich freue mich auf weitere Romane der Autorin.
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