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Usuário(a):Maria helena p/Testes

Origem: Wikipédia, a enciclopédia livre.
A Torre proibida [1]
Forbidden tower.jpg
Capa da primeira edição
Autor(es) Marion Zimmer Bradley
Idioma Inglês
Gênero Fantasy Science fiction novel
Editor DAW Books
ISBN 0-87997-323-4

A torre proibida (1993) é o título de um dos livros da escritora norte-americana Marion Zimmer Bradley, dentro do ciclo Darkover. Considerada continuação de sua obra, A Espada Encantada, a história é sobre dois casais que desafiam o poder dos círculos da matriz para proteger o planeta do sol vermelho contra a influência dos materialistas terráqueos.

Enredo

O livro começa contando o cotidiano dos heróis dessa saga. Damon Ridenow, da casta dominante dos Comyn, é casado com Ellemir. A irmã gêmea de Ellemir, Callista, renunciou os votos de fidelidade ao seu povo para se entregar ao amor de um estranho vindo das estrelas. É Andrew Carr, um terráqueo que conquista com bravura o direito de ingressar no clã. A narrativa vai elucidando aos poucos o desfecho inevitável: a revolta contra uma tradição que perdeu sua origem, defendida por fanáticos. O resultado é um levante que coloca em questão os próprios preconceitos e medos. Diante do perigo, todas as forças do Darkover, das leroni e das Torres dos lordes do conselho Comyn se unem para proteger seu mundo dessa aliança ameaçadora com os terráqueos. Nesse contexto, os quatro protagonistas se agrupam num só organismo de Iaran, formando uma família nesse novo círculo da matriz. A união lhes dá forças para lutar contra o autoritarismo que permeia a sociedade darkovana. O confronto gera uma surpreendente batalha do mundo superior entre as Torres de Arilin e a Torre Proibida, construída por Damon.

CRITICA Esta fantasia épica trata abertamente sobre sexualidade e intimidade. A abordagem explicita pode chocar falsos moralistas.

The Forbidden Tower is a fantasy novel by Marion Zimmer Bradley in her Darkover series. It was originally published by DAW Books (No. 256) in 1977. It is the sequel to The Spell Sword and is followed by The Bloody Sun. The major characters also appear in Thendara House and City of Sorcery.

This book is set approximately forty years after the events in the book Rediscovery.[2][3] The Hilary Castamir stories in Marion Zimmer Bradley's Darkover precede The Forbidden Tower by about ten years.[4]

On the road to Armida, Damon Ridenow encounters Leonie Hastur, Keeper of Arilinn. Leonie tells him that she wishes to persuade Callista Lanart to return to Arilinn Tower and replace her as Keeper. She is aware that Callista wishes to marry the Terran, Andrew Carr, who rescued her from the Caves of Corresanti (see The Spell Sword). After they arrive, Leonie meets with Callista and unable to persuade her to return, releases her from her Keeper’s vow. Dom Esteban, Callista’s father, consents to her marriage. The next day, a joint wedding is held – Ellemir is joined to Damon and Callista to Andrew in freemate marriage.

Andrew recalls that Leonie has warned him that Callista was trained in the old ways of Keepers, and may not be able to consummate their relationship for a long time. Ellemir has a premonition of her father’s death. Desiderio Leynier, a nedestro relation(Dom Alton's illegitimate son), creates trouble at the wedding feast.

Guardsmen who have been caught in a blizzard are brought to Armida. When it becomes clear that some of the men will lose their feet to frostbite, Damon, working with Andrew and Dezi, uses his laran powers to restore their circulation. The experience causes Damon to feel that laran-based healing should be available to all Darkovans, not restricted to the cloistered residents of the Towers. He reflects that it’s commonly believed that this would bring back the Ages of Chaos.

Callista agrees to share Andrew’s bed. They become telepathically aware of the lovemaking of Damon and Ellemir. When Andrew accidentally breaks the link, Callista’s Keeper training cuts in and Andrew takes the full blast of her laran. Damon comes to realize that Leonie has tampered with Callista’s channels before she reached puberty – the “old ways” that Leonie had warned him about.

Andrew is overwhelmed the experiences of the past day and walks out into the courtyard to think. He is overcome by a compulsion to leave Armida, and wanders out into the snow. Damon realizes that Dezi has overpowered Andrew telepathically and driven him away. After Andrew is rescued, Dom Esteban tells Damon that “there is bad blood” in Dezi. Damon strips Dezi of his matrix.

Damon decides to attempt timesearch – to contact Keepers in other times via the Overworld. He meets the legendary Varzil the Good of Neskaya. Varzil recommends the sacrament of Year’s End as a way of freeing Callista from her Keeper’s restrictions, but the meaning of the ritual has been lost.[5]

Dom Esteban has premonitions of evil menacing his son, Domenic. That night, Callista wakes from a dream in which Domenic has come to harm. A guardsman arrives at Armina to inform Dom Esteban that Domenic has died during sword practice. Callista believes that he has been murdered.

Dom Esteban designates his youngest son, Valdir-Lewis Lanart-Alton to be his heir. He designates Damon Ridenow as Regent of Alton. Damon discovers that Dezi has taken Domenic’s matrix while he lay injured, thus killing Domenic, and rekeyed it to himself. Callista uses her ability to take Domenic’s matrix away from Dezi. He dies as a result.

Damon realizes that their actions constitute an unofficial matrix circle – a forbidden tower. Leonie Hastur informs him that she will bring charges in council regarding his illegal matrix work. The two couples confront the council. Leonie challenges Damon to a duel between Arilinn Tower and the Forbidden Tower.

Damon breaks down the remaining emotional walls separating the two couples, realizing that essence of the sacrament of Year’s End is a shared sexual experience under the influence of kireseth flowers. Callista and Andrew finally consummate their marriage.

At dawn, they enter into the Overworld and build their tower. After a prolonged battle with Arilinn, Damon asks for a truce. He tells Leonie that they have rediscovered the old way of working, where a Keeper need not be a cloistered virgin. He realizes that Leonie herself was trained in the old ways(the illegal neutering of a Comyn woman), and mourns for her loss. Leonie acknowledges Damon’s right to keep his tower.

The two couples return to Armida.

  • Damon Ridenow, a former matrix technician from Arilinn
  • Andrew Carr (aka Ann’dra Carr), a Terran
  • Ellemir Lanart, wife of Damon Ridenow
  • Callista Lanart, a former Keeper-nominate from Arilinn
  • Esteban Lanart, Lord Alton, father of Ellemir, Callista, Domenic and Valdir
  • Leonie Hastur, Keeper of Arilinn
  • Desiderio Leynier (aka Dezi), a nedestro relation of the Lanarts
  • Ferrika, Armida’s free Amazon midwife

Consequences of the events in The Forbidden Tower to the overall Darkover series

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  • Valdir Lanart-Alton becomes head of the Alton clan, despite being his father’s youngest son. This line produces Kennard Alton, Lewis Alton, and Marguerida Alton-Hastur, all of whom who become central to Darkover’s survival.
  • Darkovan society will eventually accept the idea of non-virgin female Keepers and the revival of male Keepers.
  • The taboo forbidding the use of a matrix outside of a Tower will fade away. Matrix mechanics and technicians began to be licensed to operate outside of a Tower's confines.[6][7]

Children of the Forbidden Tower

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  • Dorilys Aillard (aka Cleindori) daughter of Damon Ridenow and Jaelle Aillard (aka Jaelle n’ha Melora). She challenged the restrictions and traditions laid upon keepers at Arilinn. Murdered by Darkovan traditionalists.[8][9]
  • Cassilde Lanart-Ridenow, described as the daughter of Damon Ridenow and Callista Lanart-Carr in The Bloody Sun.[10] Described as the Cassilde Aillard, the daughter of Damon Ridenow and Jaelle Aillard (aka Jaelle n’ha Melora) in The Alton Gift.[11] Murdered by Darkovan traditionalists.
  • Domenic Lanart-Ridenow, son of Ellemir Lanart and Damon Ridenow [12]
  • Hilary Lanart-Carr, daughter of Callista Lanart-Carr and Andrew Carr [13][14]
  • Gabriel Lanart, son of Ellemir Lanart and Andrew Carr [15]
  • Shaya n'ha Margali, daughter of Magda Lorne (Margali n'ha Yasbet) and unknown father [16]
  • Unnamed MacAnndra, son of Andrew Carr and Armida's Renunciate healer, Ferrika [17]

Like the Darkover-Renunciate books, what underlies The Forbidden Tower is a discussion of the value of monogamy, women's roles in society, the place of one's family in decision making, and whether a woman may act as an agent independent of these forces. In the books that follow, particularly The Bloody Sun, Bradley acknowledges that the reaction of a traditional society to unwanted progress is often a retreat to more traditionalism and violence.[18]

Awards and nominations

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Publication history

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  1. Maria helena p/Testes, base de dados do lançamento no Internet Speculative Fiction Database (em inglês)
  2. Fabrice Rossi, http://darkover.apiacoa.org/guide/books/rediscovery.en.html
  3. Leonie is described as age 16 in Rediscovery, and as an elderly woman nearing retirement in The Forbidden Tower.
  4. Callista Lanart becomes keeper-nominate at age 11, shortly after Hilary is dismissed from Arilinn. The Keeper's Price, pg 104, DAW Books, 1993, paperback.
  5. The ritual of Year's End is described in detail in chapter 30 of Zandru's Forge, pgs 311-314, DAW Books, 2003 paperback
  6. http://thedomains.wikispaces.com/keeper
  7. Danilo Syrtis-Ardais visits a matrix shop in Thendara in The Alton Gift, pgs 162-165, DAW Books, 2007, paperback
  8. The Bloody Sun, pg 6, Ace Science Fiction, 1964/1979, paperback
  9. Thendara House, pg 409, Marion Zimmer Bradley, DAW Books, 1983, paperback
  10. The Bloody Sun, pg 359, Marion Zimmer Bradley, Ace Science Fiction, 1964/1979, paperback
  11. The Alton Gift, pg 352, Marion Zimmer Bradley and Deborah J. Ross, DAW Books, 2007, paperback
  12. Thendara House, pg 408, DAW Books, 1983, paperback
  13. The Darkover Concordance", pg 159, Walter Breen, Pennyfarthing Press, 1979, trade paperback
  14. Hilary's Wedding, pg 143, Marion Zimmer Bradley, Marion Zimmer Bradley's Darkover, DAW Books, 1993, paperback
  15. The Darkover Concordance, pgs 52-53, 159, Walter Breen, Pennyfarthing Press, 1979, trade paperback
  16. Strife, Chel Avery, Renunciates of Darkover, DAW Books, 1991, paperback
  17. The Darkover Concordance", pg 159, Walter Breen, Pennyfarthing Press, 1979, trade paperback
  18. Leith, Linda, "Marion Zimmer Bradley and Darkover," Science Fiction Studies, Vol. 7, No. 1 (Mar 1980), pp. 28-35, McGill University, Article Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable

Predefinição:Darkover


Category:Darkover books Category:1977 novels Category:20th-century American novels Category:Novels by Marion Zimmer Bradley Category:American science fiction novels Category:DAW Books books