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A review by jpv0
The Hand of Oberon by Roger Zelazny
4.0
Heredity or environment? I wondered wryly. We were all of us, to some degree, mad after his fashion. To be honest, it had to be a form of madness, to have so much and to strive so bitterly for just a little more, for a bit of an edge over the others. He carried this tendency to its extreme, that is all. He was a caricature of this mania in all of us. In this sense, did it really matter which of us was the traitor?
This time around, Corwin et all go to the Primal Pattern (because that's a thing now) and manage to figure out what could have caused the Black Road and all the troubles that's been causing them. We proceed to get a pile more backstory / world building from Dworkin (
Upon returning, we figure out who the big bad of the whole series thus far is (
Overall, it's a solid enough book. It's nice to see a real villain and get some answers for what's actually been going on this whole time, even if it feels a bit abrupt. We do learn a bit more about how Corwin is growing and changing along. He's almost starting to feel like a worthwhile King now, rather than the just-as-bad-as-his-siblings feel from the first book.
Finally: That last sentence.
[^1]: Which supports the previous concern I had with the series: why in the world don't the various Princes of Amber just make their own kingdoms to rule? If there are four Patterns that are all sufficient enough for for these purposes (