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The Golden Key (novel)

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Publication date
  
1996

Pages
  
784 pp

OCLC
  
35268865

Genre
  
Fantasy Fiction

Cover artist
  
Michael Whelan

3.8/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print (Hardcover)

ISBN
  
0-88677-691-0

Originally published
  
1996

Publisher
  
DAW Books

Country
  
United States of America

The Golden Key (novel) t1gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcTJqXpRQ3foaclDp

Authors
  
Melanie Rawn, Jennifer Roberson, Kate Elliott

Similar
  
Melanie Rawn books, Works by Kate Elliott, Fantasy books

The Golden Key is a 1996 fantasy novel co-written by authors Jennifer Roberson (who penned the story's first act), Melanie Rawn (author of the book's second section), and Kate Elliott (who finished the work).

Set in what might loosely be described as an alternative Spain, the novel traces a family of painters who, by nature of their Gifts, can influence events around them. In the Grijalva family, the Gifted males are usually sterile and short-lived; the women, who may have a talent for painting, but do not have the Gift for the particular type of painting that alters what it portrays, are generally kept within the family to produce children. However, one woman per generation is official mistress to the ruling Duke's Heir, so that the family maintains its influence at Court. The story develops when a particularly Gifted and unscrupulous Grijalva painter finds a way to continue living through successive generations. As the political and social climate changes, including revolutions in neighboring countries and democratic challenges to the ruling Dukes, this increasingly conservative painter seeks to hold on to the past, and especially his first love, whom he has imprisoned in a painting.

Throughout the book, special emphasis is placed on iconography and a set of possibly Arabic/Moorish spells that bend events to the will of the painter. The connection between the ruling Dukes and the Grijalva family is shown to be more far-reaching and subtle than at first appears. The development in painting styles is used as a metaphor for political changes that mirror western European history, especially in France and Italy from 1500 to (say) 1820. The succession of paintings in the ducal gallery (which turns into the national gallery) is the lens through which we see the historical and personal events that make up this fantasy history.

Further plans

The original plan for The Golden Key was that it would lead to three more novels, one by each of the authors. Melanie Rawn would write The Diviner (or The Diviner's Key), Kate Elliott would write The Warrior, and Jennifer Roberson would write The Seeker. The Diviner has been published in August 2011, but plans for the other two books are respectively described as "cancelled" and "on indefinite hold."

References

The Golden Key (novel) Wikipedia