War for the Oaks: A Novel
War for the Oaks: A Novel book cover

War for the Oaks: A Novel

Paperback – July 6, 2001

Price
$13.19
Format
Paperback
Pages
336
Publisher
Orb Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0765300348
Dimensions
5.5 x 0.75 x 8.5 inches
Weight
13.6 ounces

Description

Emma Bull's debut novel, War for the Oaks , placed her in the top tier of urban fantasists and established a new subgenre. Unlike most of the rock & rollin' fantasies that have ripped off Ms. Bull's concept, War for the Oaks is well worth reading. Intelligent and skillfully written, with sharply drawn, sympathetic characters, War for the Oaks is about love and loyalty, life and death, and creativity and sacrifice. Eddi McCandry has just left her boyfriend and their band when she finds herself running through the Minneapolis night, pursued by a sinister man and a huge, terrifying dog. The two creatures are one and the same: a phouka , a faerie being who has chosen Eddi to be a mortal pawn in the age-old war between the Seelie and Unseelie Courts. Eddi isn't interested--but she doesn't have a choice. Now she struggles to build a new life and new band when she might not even survive till the first rehearsal. War for the Oaks won the Locus Magazine award for Best First Novel and was a finalist for the Mythopoeic Society Award. Other books by Emma Bull include the novels Falcon , Bone Dance (second honors, Philip K. Dick Award), Finder (a finalist for the Minnesota Book Award), and (with Stephen Brust) Freedom and Necessity ; the collection Double Feature (with Will Shetterly); and the picture book The Princess and the Lord of Night . --Cynthia Ward From Publishers Weekly Originally published by Ace in 1987, this reprint of a minor fantasy cult classic should attract new readers with its appealing and unusual blend of the world of rock and roll performers with the coexistent world of Faerie. Guitarist and singer Eddi McCandry has just left a floundering band and is organizing a new one when a phouka, a man who at times is a talking dog, becomes her guardian at the behest of the Faerie Folk. Eddi soon finds herself involved with warring Faerie groups, the Seelie Court and its noble queen versus the Unseelie Court, ruled by the evil Queen of Air and Darkness. The Seelie Court has chosen Eddi because there's "power in a mortal soul that all of Faerie cannot muster." Eddi's tart humor helps lend reality. When the phouka says, "Forth to honor and glory," she responds, "Get stuffed." For many readers, the fey qualities of the wispy fantasy may be enough; Eddi even labels her new band Eddi and the Feys. The strength of the novel, however, is in the nonfantasy scenes. These demonstrate a sure knowledge of rock music and the field, and contribute to the climax, a struggle between Eddi and the dark queen at a concert. In an appendix of special interest to fans, Bull (Bone Dance, etc.) includes excerpts of a screenplay version of the book she and her husband, Will Shetterly, wrote. A film appears an unlikely bet, but the author's prose portrayal of Faerie infringing on the real world remains an imaginative triumph. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc. “A contemporary fantasy classic.” ― Publishers Weekly “Emma Bull is really good.” ― Neil Gaiman “One of the most engaging fantasies I've read in a long time.” ― Minneapolis Star-Tribune “Knifes through the fantasy genre like a sharp blade of wind.” ― Charles de Lint From the Inside Flap A contemporary fantasy classic.-- Publishers Weekly Emma Bull is really good.--Neil Gaiman Acclaimed by critics and readers on its first publication in 1987, winner of the Locus Award for Best First Novel, Emma Bull's War for the Oaks is one of the novels that has defined modern urban fantasy. Eddi McCandry sings rock and roll. But her boyfriend just dumped her, her band just broke up, and life could hardly be worse. Then, walking home through downtown Minneapolis on a dark night, she finds herself drafted into an invisible war between the faerie folk. Now, more than her own survival is at risk--and her own preferences, musical and personal, are very much beside the point. By turns tough and lyrical, fabulous and down-to-earth, War for the Oaks is a fantasy novel that's as much about this world as about the other one. It's about real love and loyalty, about real music and musicians, about false glamour and true art. It will change the way you hear and see your own daily life. One of the most engaging fantasies I've read in a long time. -- Minneapolis Star-Tribune Knifes through the fantasy genre like a sharp blade of wind. --Charles de Lint "A contemporary fantasy classic."― Publishers Weekly "Emma Bull is really good."―Neil GaimanAcclaimed by critics and readers on its first publication in 1987, winner of the Locus Award for Best First Novel, Emma Bull's War for the Oaks is one of the novels that has defined modern urban fantasy.Eddi McCandry sings rock and roll. But her boyfriend just dumped her, her band just broke up, and life could hardly be worse. Then, walking home through downtown Minneapolis on a dark night, she finds herself drafted into an invisible war between the faerie folk. Now, more than her own survival is at risk―and her own preferences, musical and personal, are very much beside the point.By turns tough and lyrical, fabulous and down-to-earth, War for the Oaks is a fantasy novel that's as much about this world as about the other one. It's about real love and loyalty, about real music and musicians, about false glamour and true art. It will change the way you hear and see your own daily life."One of the most engaging fantasies I've read in a long time." ― Minneapolis Star-Tribune "Knifes through the fantasy genre like a sharp blade of wind." ―Charles de Lint Emma Bull ’s War for the Oaks won the Locus Award for Best First Novel. Her subsequent works have included Falcon, the Hugo, Nebula, and World Fantasy Award-finalist Bone Dance, Finder, and (with Steven Brust) Freedom and Necessity. She lives in Tucson, Arizona. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. War for the Oaks A Novel By Bull, Emma Orb Books Copyright © 2001 Bull, EmmaAll right reserved. ISBN: 9780765300348 Prologuexa0xa0By day, the Nicollet Mall winds through Minneapolis like a paved canal. People flow between its banks, eddying at the doors of office towers and department stores. The big red-and-white city buses roar at every corner. On the many-globed lampposts, banners advertising a museum exhibit flap in the wind that the tallest buildings snatch out of the sky. The skyway system vaults the mall with its covered bridges of steel and glass, and they, too, are full of people, color, motion.But late at night, there’s a change in the Nicollet Mall.The street lamp globes hang like myriad moons, and light glows in the empty bus shelters like nebulae. Down through the silent business district the mall twists, the silver zipper in a patchwork coat of many dark colors. The sound of traffic from Hennepin Avenue, one block over, might be the grating of the World-Worm’s scales over stone.Near the south end of the mall, in front of Orchestra Hall, Peavey Plaza beckons: a reflecting pool, and a cascade that descends from towering chrome cylinders to a sunken walk-in maze of stone blocks and pillars for which “fountain” is an inadequate name. In the moonlight, it is black and silver, gray and white, full of an elusive play of shape and contrast.On that night, there were voices in Peavey Plaza. One was like the susurrus of the fountain itself, sometimes hissing, sometimes with the little-bell sound of a water drop striking. The other was deep and rough; if the concrete were an animal, it would have this voice.“Tell me,” said the water voice, “what you have found.”The deep voice replied. “There is a woman who will do, I think.”When water hits a hot griddle, it sizzles; the water-voice sounded like that. “You are our eyes and legs in this, Dog. That should not interfere with your tongue. Tell me!”A low, growling laugh, then: “She makes music, the kind that moves heart and body. In another time, we would have found her long before, for that alone. We grow fat and slow in this easy life,” the rough voice said, as if it meant to say something very different.The water made a fierce sound, but the rough voice laughed again, and went on. “She is like flowering moss, delicate and fair, but proof against frosts and trampling feet. Her hair is the color of an elm leaf before it falls, her eyes the gray of the storm that brings it down. She does not offend the eye. She seems strong enough, and I think she is clever. Shall I bring her to show to you?”“Can you?”“B’lieve I can. But we should rather ask—will she do what she’s to do?”The water-voice’s laughter was like sleet on a window. “With all the Court against her if she refuses? Oh, if we fancy her, Dog, she’ll do. Pity her if she tries to stand against us.”And the rough voice said quietly, “I shall.”xa0Chapter 1 Another Magic Moment in Showbiz The University Bar was not, in the grand scheme of the city, close to the university. Nor was its clientele collegiate. They worked the assembly lines and warehouses, and wanted uncomplicated entertainment. The club boasted a jukebox stocked by the rental company and two old arcade games. It was small and smoky and smelled vaguely bad. But InKline Plain, the most misspelled band in Minneapolis, was there, playing the first night of a two-night gig with a sort of weary desperation. The promise of fifty dollars per band member kept them going; it was more than they’d made last week.Eddi McCandry stared bleakly at the dim little stage with its red-and-black flocked wallpaper. The band’s equipment threatened to overflow it. She’d tried to wedge her guitar stand out of the way, but it still seemed likely to leap out and trip someone. She was glad the keyboard player had quit two weeks before—there wasn’t room for him.The first set had been had enough, playing to a nearly empty club. The next two were worse. Too many country fans with requests for favorites. And of course, Stuart, as bandleader, had accepted them all, played them wretchedly, forgot the words, and made it plain that he didn’t care. They were the wrong band for this bar.“I think,” Eddi said, “that this job was a bad idea.”Her companion nodded solemnly. “Every time you’ve said that this evening, it’s sounded smarter.” Carla DiAmato was the drummer for InKline Plain. With her shaggy black hair and her eyes made up dark for the stage, she looked exotic as a tiger, wholly out of place in the University Bar.“It would have been smarter to tell Stuart it was a bad idea,” Eddi said. “Ideally, before he booked the job.”“You couldn’t know.”“I could. I did. Look at this place.”Carla sighed. “I think I’m gonna hear the ‘This Band Sucks Dead Rat’ speech again.”“Well, it does.”“Through a straw. I know. So why don’t you quit?”Eddi looked at her, then at her glass, then at the ceiling. “Why don’t you?”“It’s steady work.” Carla was silent for a moment, then added, “Well, it used to be.”“Tsk. You don’t even have my excuse.”“You mean I haven’t been sleeping with Stuart?”“Yeah,” Eddi sighed, “like that.”“Sometimes I take my blessings for granted. I’m going to go up and scare the cockroaches out of the bass drum.”“Good luck,” said Eddi. “I’ll be right behind you.”She almost made it to the stage before Stuart Kline grabbed her arm. His face was flushed, and his brown hair was rumpled, half-flattened. She sighed. “You’re drunk, Stu,” she said with a gentleness that surprised her.“Fuck it.” Petulance twisted up his male-model features. She should have felt angry, or ashamed. All she felt was a distant wonder: I used to be in love with him .She asked, “You want to do easy stuff this set?”“I said fuck it, fuck off. I’m okay.”Eddi shrugged. “It’s your hanging.”He grabbed her arm again. “Hey, I want you to be nicer to the club managers.”“What?”“Don’t look at me like that. Just flirt. It’s good for the band.”She wanted to tweak his nose, see his smile—but that didn’t make him smile anymore. “Stuart, you don’t get gigs by sending the rhythm guitarist to flirt with the manager. You get ’em by playing good dance music.”“I play good dance music.”“We play anything that’s already been played to death. All night, people have been sticking their heads in the front door, listening to half a song, and leaving. You in a betting mood?”“Why?”“I bet the nice man at the bar tells us not to come back tomorrow.”“Damn you,” he raged suddenly, “is that my fault?”Eddi blinked.“You pissed him off, didn’t you? Why do you have to be such a bitch?”For a long moment she thought she might shout back at him. But it was laughter that came racing up her throat. Stuart’s look of foolish surprise fed it, doubled it. She planted a smacking kiss on his chin. “Stuart, honey,” she grinned, “you gotta grow where you’re planted.”She loped over and swung up on stage, took her lipstick-red Rickenbacker from the stand, and flipped the strap over her shoulder. She caught Carla’s eye over the tops of the cymbals. “Dale back from break yet?”Carla shook her head, then inhaled loudly through pursed lips. “Parking lot,” she croaked.“Oh, goody. The whole left side of the stage in an altered state of consciousness. Let’s figure out the set list.”“But we’ve got a set list.”“Let’s make a new one. May as well be hanged for Prince as for Pink Floyd.”“But Stuart--”Eddi grinned. “I want to leave this band in a blaze of glory.”Carla’s eyes grew wide. “You’re—Jesus. Okay, set list. Can we dump all the Chuck Berry?”“Yeah. Let’s show this dive that we at least flirt with modern music, huh?”They came up with a list of songs in a few gleeful minutes. Stuart hoisted himself on stage as they finished, eyeing them with sullen suspicion. He slung on his guitar and began to noodle, running through his arsenal of electronic effects—more, Eddi suspected, to prove to the audience that he had them than to make sure they worked.Dale, the bass player, ambled on stage looking vaguely pleased with himself. Dale was all right in his own disconnected way; but he liked country rock and hated rock ’n’ roll, and consoled himself with dope during breaks. Eddi cranked up the bass on her amp and hoped it would make up for whatever he was too stoned to deliver.Carla was watching her, waiting for the cue to start. Stuart and Dale were ready, if not precisely waiting. “Give us a count,” she said to Carla. Stuart glared at her. Carla counted, and they kicked off with a semblance of unity.They began with a skewed version of Del Shannon’s “Runaway.” It was familiar enough to pull people onto the dance floor, and the band’s odd arrangement disguised most of the mistakes. Eddi and Carla did impromptu girl-group vocals. Dale looked confused. Then they dived into the Bangles’ “In a Different Light,” and Stuart began to sulk. Eddi had anticipated that. The next one was an old Eagles song that gave Stuart a chance to sing and muddle up the lead guitar riffs.Perhaps the scanty audience felt Eddi’s sudden madness; they were in charity with the band for the first time that night. People had finally started to dance. Eddi hoped it wasn’t too late to impress the manager, but suspected it was.Carla set the bass drum and her drum machine to tossing the percussion back and forth. The dancers were staying on the floor, waiting for the beat to fulfill its promise. Eddi murmured the four-count. Dale thumped out a bass line that was only a little too predictable. Stuart shot Eddi an unreadable look and layered on the piercing voice of his Stratocaster. Eddi grabbed her mike and began to sing. You told me I was pretty I can’t believe it’s true . The little dears you left me for They all look just like you . Ugly is as ugly does — Are you telling me what to do ? Wear my face You can have it for a week Wear my face Aren’t the cheekbones chic ? Wear my face See how people look at you ? Wear my face See how much my face can do ?xa0xa0They were still dancing. The band was together and tight at last, and Eddi felt as if she’d done it all herself in a burst of goddesslike musical electricity.Then she saw the man standing at the edge of the dance floor. His walnut-stain skin seemed too dark for his features. He wore his hair smoothed back, except for a couple of escaped curls on his forehead. His eyes were large and slanted upward under thick arched brows; his nose was narrow and slightly aquiline. He wore a long dark coat with the collar up, and a gleaming white scarf that reflected the stage lights into his face. When she looked at him, he met her eyes boldly and grinned.Eddi snagged the microphone, took the one step toward him that she had room for, and sang the last verse at him. I’ve seen the way you look away When you think I might see , You say I scare you silly — That’s reacting sensibly . Why should people look at you When they could look at me ?xa0xa0It was Eddi who had to turn away, and the last chorus was delivered to the dancers. The man had met her look with a silent challenge that made her skin prickle. His sloping eyes had been full of reflected lights in colors that shone nowhere in the room.She almost missed Carla’s neat segue into the next song. She nailed down her first guitar chord barely in time, and caught Stuart’s scowl out of the corner of her eye.Eddi had wanted to close with something rambunctious, something the audience would like yet that would allow Eddi and Carla to respect themselves in the morning. Carla had hit upon ZZ Top’s “Cheap Sunglasses.” Halfway into it, with a shower of sparks and a vile smell, the ancient power amp for the PA dropped dead.As the microphones failed, Stuart’s vocals disappeared tinnily under the sound of guitars and bass and Carla’s drums. Stuart, never at his best in the face of adversity, lost his temper. He yanked his guitar strap over his head and let the Strat drop to the stage. The pickups howled painfully through his amp.Eddi heard Dale’s bass stumble through a succession of wrong notes, and fall silent. She supposed he was right; Stuart had made it impossible to end the song gracefully. But for her pride’s sake, she played out the measure and added a final flourish. Carla matched her perfectly, and Eddi wanted to kiss her feet for it.The dancers had deserted the floor, and people were finishing drinks and pulling on jackets. She swept the room a stagey bow. At the corner of her vision, she thought she saw a dark-coated figure move toward the door.Stuart had turned off his amp and unplugged his axe. His expression was forbidding. Eddi turned away to tend to her own equipment, but not before she saw the club manager striding toward the stage.“You the bandleader?” she heard him ask Stuart.“Yeah,” said Stuart, “what is it?” It’s our walking papers, Stu , she thought sadly, knowing that he could save the whole gig now, if only he would be pleasant and conciliating. He wouldn’t be, of course. The manager would tell Stuart what he should be doing with his band, and Stuart, instead of thanking him for the tip, would recommend he keep his asshole advice to himself.And Stuart would make Eddi out the villain if he could. Well, she was done with that now. She finished packing her guitar and tracked the power cord on her amplifier back to the outlet.“You’re that sure, huh?” Carla’s voice came from over her head.“You mean, am I packing up everything? Yeah. You want help tearing down?”Carla looked faded and limp. “You can pack the electronic junk.”Eddi nodded, and started unplugging things from the back of the drum machine. “You done good, kid. Even at the end when it hit the fan.”Carla shook her head and grinned. “Well, you got to go out in a blaze of something .”Over at the bar, Stuart and the manager had begun to shout at each other. “I booked a goddamn five-piece!” the manager yelled. “You goddamn well did break your contract!”Carla looked up at Eddi, her eyes wide. “Oh boy—you mean we’re not even gonna get paid ?”Eddi turned to see how Dale was taking the news. He was nowhere to be seen.“Carla, you think your wagon will hold your equipment and mine, too?”Carla smiled. “The Titanic? I won’t even have to put the seat down.”They did have to put the seat down, but the drums, drum machine, Eddi’s guitar, and her Fender Twin Reverb all fit. They made three trips out the back door with the stuff, and Stuart and the manager showed no sign of noticing them.As Carla bullied the wagon out of its parking space, Eddi spotted Dale. He was leaning against the back of his rusted-out Dodge. The lit end of his joint flared under his nose. “Hold it,” Eddi said to Carla. She jumped out of the car and ran over to him. “Hey, Dale!”“Eddi? Hullo. Is Stuart still at it?”“Still at what?”Dale shrugged and dragged at the joint. “You know,” he croaked, “screwing up.” He exhaled and held the J out to her.Eddi shook her head. “I didn’t think you’d noticed—I mean—”“Been pretty bad the last month. It’d be hard not to.” He smiled sadly at the toes of his cowboy boots. “So, you going?”“Yeah. That is, I’m leaving the band.”“That’s what I meant.”“Oh. Well, I wanted to say good-bye. I’ll miss you.” Which, Eddi realized with a start, was more true than she’d thought.Dale smiled at his joint. “Maybe I’ll quit gigging. Friend of mine has a farm out past Shakopee, says I can stay there. He’s got goats, and some beehives—pretty fuckin’ weird.” He looked at her, and his voice lost some of its dreaminess. “You know, you’re really good. I don’t much like that stuff, you know, but you’re good.”Eddi found she couldn’t answer that. She hugged him instead, whispered, “Bye, Dale,” and ran back to the car.Carla turned north on Highway 35. Eddi hung over the back of her seat watching the Minneapolis skyline rise up and unroll behind them. White light banded the top of the IDS building, rebounded off the darkened geometry of a blue glass tower nearby. The clock on the old courthouse added the angular red of its hands. The river glittered like wrinkled black patent leather, and the railroad bridges glowed like something from a movie set.“I love this view,” Eddi sighed. “Even the Metrodome’s not bad from here, for a glow-in-the-dark fungus.”“Boy, you are feeling sentimental,” said Carla.“Yeah.” Eddi turned around to face the windshield. “Carla, am I doing the right thing?”“You mean dumping Personality Man?”Eddi looked at her, startled.“Hey,” Carla continued, “no big deduction. You couldn’t leave Stu’s band and stay friends with Stu—nobody could. So kissing off the band means breaking up with Mr. Potato Head.”Eddi giggled. “It’s a really pretty potato.”“And solid all the way through. This’ll probably wipe the band out, y’know.”“He can replace me,” Eddi shrugged.“Maybe. But you and me?”“You’re quitting?”“I’m not sticking around to watch Stuart piss and moan.” Carla’s tone was a little too offhand, and Eddi shot her a glance. “Oh, all right,” Carla amended. “Stuart would scream about what a bitch and a traitor you are, I’d tell him he was a shit and didn’t deserve you, and I’d end up walking out anyway. Why not now?”Eddi slugged her gently in the shoulder. “Yer a pal.”“Yeah, yeah. So start a band I can drum in.”“You could play for anybody.”“I don’t want to play for anybody . You do that, you end up working with bums like Stuart.”With a lurch and a rumble of drumheads, they pulled in the driveway of Chester’s. Even in the dark, its bits of Tudor architecture were unconvincing. The bar rush that hit every all-night restaurant was in full force; they had to wait for a table. When they got one, they ordered coffee and tea.“So, are you going to start a band?”Eddi slumped in her seat. “Oh God, Carla. It’s such a crappy way to make a living. You work and work, and you end up playing cover tunes in the Dew Drop Inn where all the guys slow-dance with their hands in their girlfriends’ back pockets.”“So you don’t do that kind of band.”“What kind do you do?”Their order arrived, and Carla dunked a tea bag with great concentration. “Originals,” she said at last. “Absolutely new, on-the-edge stuff. Very high class. Only play the good venues.”Eddi stared at her. “Maybe I should just go over to Control Data and apply for a job as Chairman of the Board.”Carla looked out the window. “Listen. You don’t become a bar band and work your way up from there. There is no up from there. It’s a dead end. All you can become is the world’s best bar band.”Eddi sighed. “I don’t want a new band. I want to be a normal person.”Carla’s dark eyes were very wide. “Oh,” she said.“Hey,” Eddi smiled limply, “it’s not like you to miss a straight line.”“Too easy,” Carla said with a shrug. Then she shook her head and made her black hair fly, and seemed to shake off her sorrow as well. “Give it time. You don’t remember how awful it is being normal.”“Not as awful as being in InKline Plain.”“Oh, worse,” said Carla solemnly. “They make you sit at a desk all day and eat vending machine donuts, and your butt gets humongous.”“Now that,” Eddi said, “is a job I can handle.”“If you work hard, you get promoted to brownies.” Carla set her cup down. “Come on, let’s roll.”Outside, the wind was blowing. It had none of the rough-sided cold of winter in it; it was damp, with a spoor of wildness that seemed to race through Eddi’s blood. It made her want to run, yell, do any foolish thing.…“You okay?” Carla’s voice broke into her mood. “If you don’t get in the car, I’m gonna leave without you.”Eddi took pleasure in the dash to the car, the way the wind tugged on her hair. “Roll the windows down.”“Are you bats? We’ll freeze.”Eddi rolled down her own, but it wasn’t enough. As they drove toward the city, the early spring madness drained away. The wagon’s rattles and squeaks, its smell of cigarette butts and old vinyl and burnt oil, took its place. By the time they’d reached the edge of downtown, Eddi felt weary in every muscle and bone.What should she do now? What could she do? It sounded fine to tell Carla that she wanted to be normal midnight. Each night her imagination had tenanted the shadows with burglars and arsonists. At the end of a week the shadows were full, and she quit. She typed too slowly—did everything with her hands too slowly, in fact, except play the guitar.As for a normal love affair, it wasn’t impossible. She was reasonably intelligent. She was attractive, though not beautiful: blond and grayeyed with strong features and clear skin; and she was small and slender and knew how to choose her clothes. But she wasn’t sure where to find men who weren’t—well, musicians.“Mighty quiet,” Carla said, as if she already knew why.“I’m…I guess I’m beginning to realize the consequences of everything.”“Mmm. You going to chicken out?”“No. But…would you call me tomorrow? Around two-ish? I figure I’ll call Stu at one and tell him.”“And you’ll need someone to tell you you’re gonna be okay.”Eddi smiled sheepishly. “You must have done this yourself.”“Everybody has to, at least once. Don’t beat yourself over the head for it.”The light was red at Washington and Hennepin, the corner where Carla would begin negotiating the rat’s nest of one-way streets that led to Eddi’s apartment. “Let me off here,” she said suddenly.“Wha—why?”“I want to walk. It’s a nice night.”Carla was shocked. “It’s freezing. And you’ll get murdered.”“You’ve been living around the lakes too long. You think any place with buildings more than three stories high is full of addicts.”“And I’m right. Anyway, what about your axe and stuff?”It was true; she couldn’t haul her guitar and amplifier fourteen blocks. She was settling back in the passenger seat when Carla spoke again.“I know, I know. ‘Carla, would you mind taking them to your place and carrying them all the way up the back stairs, then carrying them back down tomorrow when you come over to keep me from being miserable ’cause I broke up with my boyfriend?’ Sure, Ed, what’re friends for?”Eddi giggled. “If you’d quit going to Mass, you’d make a great Jewish mother.” She leaned over and hugged her.“Jeez, will you get out of here? The light’s changed twice already!” After Eddi had bounced out and slammed the door, Carla shouted through the half-open window, “I’ll call at two!”“Thank you!” Eddi yelled back, and waved as the station wagon rumbled and clanked away from the curb. The gold-and-gray flank of the library rose before her, and she followed it to the Nicollet Mall.Whatever had tugged at her in the restaurant parking lot refused to be summoned back now. Eddi shook her head and started down the mall, and hoped that the effort would blow her melancholy away. The rhythm of her steps reminded her of a dozen different songs at once, and she hummed one softly to herself. It was Kate Bush, she realized, “Cloudbusting,” and she sang it as she walked.Then she saw the figure standing by the bus shelter across the street.By the shape, it was a man—a man’s broad-brimmed hat and long, fitted coat. He didn’t move, didn’t seem even to turn his head to watch her, but she had a sudden wild understanding of the idea of a bullet with one’s name on it. This figure had her name on him. You must be feeling mighty low, girl , she scolded herself, if you think that every poor idiot who’s missed his bus is lying in wait for you . Still, the man seemed naggingly present , and almost familiar. And three in the morning was an odd hour to wait for a bus in a town where the buses quit running at half past midnight.Her pace was steady as she crossed the empty street. Behind her, she heard his steps begin. It’s not fair , she raged as she sped up. I don’t need this, not tonight . She thought she heard a low laugh behind her, half the block away. Her stride lost some of its purpose and took on an edge of panic.South of the power company offices, Eddi turned and headed for Hennepin Avenue. If there were still people on any street in Minneapolis, they would be on Hennepin. A police cruiser might even come by.…The footsteps behind her had stopped. There, see? Poor bastard was just walking down Nicollet. I’ll be fine now —A black, waist-high shape slunk out of the alley in front of her. Its bared teeth glittered as it snarled; its eyes glowed red. It was a huge black dog, stalking stiff-legged toward her. Eddi backed up a step. It made a ferocious noise and lunged. She turned and ran in the only direction she could, back toward Nicollet.She got one of the streetlight posts on the mall between her and the dog and turned to face it. It wasn’t there. Across the street, in the shadow of a doorway, Eddi saw the silhouette of the man in the hat and long coat. He threw back his head, and she heard his laughter. The streetlight fell on his face and throat and she saw the gleam of his white scarf, his dark skin and sloping, shining eyes. It was the man from the dance floor, from the University Bar. She ran.The footsteps behind her seemed unhurried, yet they never dropped back, no matter how fast she ran. She tried again to turn toward Hennepin. The black dog lunged at her from out of a parking ramp exit, its red eyes blazing. This is crazy , she thought with the dead calm of fear. Muggers and mad dogs. I’m stuck in a Vincent Price movie. Where are the zombies ?She was running down Nicollet again before she realized that it couldn’t be the same dog. But it was insane to think that the man could have known she would walk home, impossible to think he had a pack of dogs. Her breath burned in her throat. She had a stitch in her side. Her pace had become a quick stumble.She’d almost reached the end of the mall, she realized. Two blocks away were the Holiday Inn and the Hyatt, and she could run into either, into a lobby full of light and bellhops and a desk clerk who’d call the police. She staggered across the street toward Peavey Plaza and Orchestra Hall.The black dog seemed to form out of the shadows. Perhaps it was only one dog, after all; surely there weren’t two dogs like this. It was huge, huge, its head low, its fur bristling gunmetal-dark in the street light. It growled softly, in macabre counterpoint to the waterfall sounds of the Peavey Plaza fountain. Did the damned dog know it stood between her and safety? How had it gotten past her? She moved sideways, through the concrete planters that marked the sidewalk level of Peavey Plaza. The hotels seemed miles away now. She would have to try to lose both dog and man in the complexity of the ornamental pool and fountains below her, and escape out the other side.The dog lifted its head and howled, and Eddi thought of the dark man and his laugh. She wanted to curse, to throw something, to be home in her bed. She raced down a flight of steps, then another.The footsteps behind her were sudden, as was the tap on her shoulder. She tried to turn in midstride and her foot didn’t land on anything. Just before she plunged backward and headfirst down the last of the steps, she saw the man behind her, his eyes wide, his hand reaching out.Then pain took away her fear, and darkness took the pain.xa0Copyright © 1987, 2001 by Emma Bullf Continues... Excerpted from War for the Oaks by Bull, Emma Copyright © 2001 by Bull, Emma. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Acclaimed by critics and readers on its first publication in 1987, winner of the Locus Award for Best First Novel, Emma Bull's
  • War for the Oaks
  • is one of the novels that has defined modern urban fantasy.Eddi McCandry sings rock and roll. But her boyfriend just dumped her, her band just broke up, and life could hardly be worse. Then, walking home through downtown Minneapolis on a dark night, she finds herself drafted into an invisible war between the faerie folk. Now, more than her own survival is at risk―and her own preferences, musical and personal, are very much beside the point.By turns tough and lyrical, fabulous and down-to-earth,
  • War for the Oaks
  • is a fantasy novel that's as much about this world as about the other one. It's about real love and loyalty, about real music and musicians, about false glamour and true art. It will change the way you hear and see your own daily life.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(197)
★★★★
25%
(164)
★★★
15%
(98)
★★
7%
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23%
(150)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Fey, death, and Rock 'n' roll . . .

I read this book about three years ago, back when it was still out of print, and I was very excited when I heard it was being reprinted. I can't exactly decide whether I like the cover, but it's certainly better than the old one.
Eddi McCandry is the guitar player for a lousy band. They're not really going anywhere, and neither, particularly, is her life. One night, everything changes: the band splits up, she breaks up with the lead singer, and she gets chosen to be the mortal talisman for a war between the Seelie and Unseelie fey.
This is all okay, though, because she gets to put another band together, and they're good. Really good. Especially the other guitarist . . . and let's not forget her bodyguard, the phouka . . . Oh, yeah, she needs a bodyguard because the Unseelie fey are trying to kill her, in between band rehearsals and battles . . .
One thing that really made me laugh about this book was the setting. It's the eighties. Eddi's clothing, which is REALLY COOL by the standards of the book, sounds like something off of Saved by the Bell.
This is definitely a book for fantasy-punk geeks: the music mentioned includes bands such as Boiled in Lead (Celtic Rock) and David Bowie (self-explanatory); the fashions, albeit eighties, are the same; and the general demeanor of the book is rather Borderlands-y. (Which makes sense, considering Emma Bull was one of the co-creators of the original Borderlands series.)
However, even if you aren't a fantasy-punk geek, you can still read it. It's engaging and has very likable characters; the plot takes a couple of not-precisely-as-expected turns; the description of the fey is interesting and fits fairly well with the expected fantasy fey-canon (she didn't try to rewrite the Sidhe as bloodsucking ugly vampires, for example).
So, to end, elements of fantasy, realism, eighties-punk, romance, and humanity make it accessible and readable by anyone. Even those who don't remember the eighties.
26 people found this helpful
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A Riff for Faerie

There are no dragons here, but you won't miss them. Instead you'll find a superb tale of faerie, music, and romance. Emma Bull and Steven Brust (also a well known fantasy author) were at one point two components of the band Cats Laughing, and Bull uses her musical knowledge and experience to great advantage here. Her descriptions of practice sessions and performances will resonate with any music fan, and she skillfully weaves this into a major component of her tale of Eddi, selected by the Seelie to invoke the boon of mortality on the battles of the faerie world. To protect Eddi until the time of the battle, a phouka is assigned to guard her, at times a formidable dog, at other times a whimsical human trickster. Though quite predictable, there is a slowly building romance between the two, and this defines both characters to a depth that is rare in fantasy, as each impacts on and reacts to the other, and wind their way into the reader's heart.
The world of faerie is seen at a distance (even though the major characters are directly involved in some of the faerie battles), never fully explained or examined in detail, and this very indistinctness adds flavor, a bit of mystery, and charm to what is really a story of and about some of our deepest emotions. The final battle between Eddi and the Queen of Air and Darkness is extraordinarily different, drawing on the 'magical' emotional state that sometimes occurs between the makers and hearers of music, rather than swords, spells, talismans, or some hidden bit of arcane knowledge so common to the climax of most fantasy.
Different, powerful, skillfully told, this book is a charmer.
22 people found this helpful
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Rockin' in the Sidhe World *grin*

Anyone who likes urban fantasy should go "back to basics" and pick up this defining classic of the subgenre. I've read several books that borrow zillions of plot elements from _War for the Oaks_, but never reach the same sort of exhilarating heights. Yeah, yeah, we all know the story: young woman wanders the city at night and meets a mysterious stranger, so on, so forth. Now sit back and see it done right!
Eddi McCandry has just quit her boyfriend's abysmal band, and now plans to break up with the boyfriend as well. But before she gets the chance to talk to him, she gets recruited into a war between the Seelie and Unseelie Courts, for the heart and soul and magic of Minneapolis. You see, the Fair Folk can't wound each other in battle unless there is a human there to lend mortality. The Seelie Court needs Eddi in order to make their sparring a war rather than a mere sport.
What follows is a romp of an adventure, as Eddi juggles her new band, Seelie matters, and two very different Faerie men. One will dazzle her with beauty and charm; the other will surprise her with courage and devotion. I disagree with the reviewers who griped about the love story. First of all, the romance is sweet and intense, and *feels real*, which means something in a world where main characters seem to fall in love solely because one of them is the male lead and the other is the female lead. The relationship unfolds naturally, and I had goosebumps on my arms and a tear in my eye when I read the stormy-night love scene. Second, the romantic subplots do a great job of showing the differences between the human mind and the Faerie psyche.
Ever notice how, in some urban fantasy novels, the faeries are just like normal people, except that they have prettier hair and don't know how to use household appliances? This is not one of those novels. One of Emma Bull's achievements with this novel is that she sheds some light on the way faeries think. What do faeries think of love? Why don't they like being thanked? Using scraps of lore, Bull creates a vivid view of Faerie culture.
And along the way, she also takes us on a wild ride through the land of rock music, showing us the way a band forms, and eventually, ideally, becomes like family. She captures the exhilaration of performing music, and the magic the music evokes. And as an added bonus, Bull is pretty darn good at writing rock lyrics. I wonder if those are actual songs I could find recordings of, if I knew the name of her band.
13 people found this helpful
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Great book but could have been better

Yes, War For The Oaks is a classic of mythic fiction. It has been called by many A Holy Grail of Urban Fantasy. But does it deserve all this acclaim? I'm not so sure.I recently read War For The Oaks for the first time, since it was brought back into print last month. I found it a lovely, quick read, but nothing to try to convince all my friends to read.Let me start out by saying what I didn't like. First of all, unlike a lot of mythic fiction, such as that written by Charles de Lint and Neil Gaiman, War For The Oaks mostly lacked a deeper meaning to its story. The strongest underlying theme of this book is to not let anyone get you down and to be true to yourself, a message that is very much overdone and this book adds very little that is new or original to the idea.Second, I never felt that any of the characters were truly in danger from their enemies. There are very few real confrontations in the book and the few that are there really inspire no sense of drama. I just knew all the main characters would be fine.Third, Emma Bull has a very plain way of writing for the most part. I like my mythic fiction spiced with lyrical language and Emma Bull just does not seem to have the talent to write the way I expect for this genre. The one exception in War For The Oaks is the songs "written" and performed by Eddi McCandry. These are pretty good.And lastly on the list of things I didn't like about this book, I am really tired of run of the mill love stories, the kind where girl falls for boy she initially couldn't stand but you could tell throughout the book there was sort of a sexual tension between them. It's just way too played out and obvious. Not every story needs romance! Especially the over-done type.Now, there are things I liked about this book. First off, Emma Bull's portrayal of the courts and characters of Faerie are almost exactly how I would imagine them myself. I could actually believe that she spoke to magickal creatures and interviewed them about their history, customs, likes and dislikes, and so on. The descriptions of Faerie hospitality and obligation especially ring true.Also, to contradict somewhat a comment I made earlier in this review, Emma Bull DOES have a knack for dialogue and making each character have his or her own way of speaking. This somewhat makes up for her otherwise plain writing style.I also enjoyed the way the characters interacted with each other, verbally and non-verbally. It gives them a sense of life that added to my enjoyment of the book.Also, the ending of the book is pretty much perfect and very "in-character" for the traditions of Faerie.All in all, this is a very fun read and I do recommend it. Just don't expect any deep insights into life, myth, or magick within its pages. If you read it and like it, I also recommend Jack Of Kinrowan, by Charles de Lint, or anything by Charles de Lint for that matter.
13 people found this helpful
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Not a compelling read

Looking at the reviews, people really seem to like this book and for the life of me, I can't figure out why. Where to start?...I feel like so little happened in the first third of the book that you could jump right in after that and not really miss anything- a couple of sentences could have told you everything you needed to know up to that point.

I didn't find that she made me really care about any of her characters and considering how weak I thought the overall story line was, it's just deadly if you can't make people empathize with your characters.The only one that I really enjoyed reading about was the phouka. Eddi doesn't seem all that exceptional as a person and you never really get a convincing explanation as to why she's the chosen one. Really, it sounds like they could have picked just about anyone(and the Unseelie Court pretty much did as evidenced by their choice of loser Stuart!). The character of Willy could have been fascinating and exciting but he just ends up as a semi-minor totally underdeveloped character.

The book was written in the late 80's, an era that was totally full of cheese and it comes through in the book big time. I could get past how dated the story felt but by the end, it just felt silly. A band that does mostly covers is supposed to save the world (or at least the greater Minneapolis/St. Paul area) and the Seelie Court through their music and general charisma? Really? Wow, why don't we solve all the world's problems that way? It was just goofy. Bull obviously knows how to weave sentences together into beautiful passages but the story is poorly executed so I wouldn't recommend this to anyone. It was just a let down.
12 people found this helpful
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An excellent urban fantasy

You would think that really liking a book would make it easier to review After all, I should be able to go on for pages and pages about how wonderful it is. The problem with that theory is that wouldn't really be a review. That would be me raving about the book, and while that's all well and good, that's not what I want to do.

So, just so I can get it over with, let's start with what I didn't like about War for the Oaks.

The first thing that comes to mind is that I really wanted to know what the Pookah's name was, but that's really just me nit-picking.

I guess the main thing that I had a problem with was some of the characterization. Yes, the main characters were characterized well, but I felt that there was room for improvement with the characterization of some of the band members. Bull herself even says in the back where she's talking about the screenplay she wrote for the story that one band member in particular is a very interesting character and so she gave him more room in the screenplay. I would have to agree that he seems like an interesting character, but I wish he had gotten more development in the book. For probably about 75% of the story he was just there, not really doing much other than playing the instrument with the rest of the band. There was room to do more with him.

The other thing that bothered me slightly was the way that the Seelie Court (Seleighe Court, Bright Court, Summer Court, whatever you prefer) approached Eddi. While I get that they were desperate and that they are Fae and think and react differently than humans, I was shocked by their abruptness. However, I think that a lot of that is that I like to think that the Seelie Fae are shiny, happy, friendly creatures when most theories have them as cool and unsympathetic. What makes them Seelie is that they don't actively seek to hurt. They may occasionally help, but humans are still mostly amusement. It still jars me a little when I see that sometimes, though.

Other than that, though, I can't really think of anything else that I didn't like. Perhaps I would be able to come up with something if I wracked my brain for a few hours, but then this could just turn in to a rant about the book, and I don't want that either.

One thing that I particularly liked was Bull's idea of Sidhe warfare. It makes sense that having eternal (or close to it) lives, they would view war differently from humans. It is, after all, a moment's entertainment, and rarely something to be taken seriously. I loved how they danced around each other (sometimes literally) when they weren't on the battlefield, taking care not to upset the all important status quo. The party in particular amused me greatly because of the way the Seelie and Unseelie Fae were reacting to each other.

I also really liked how the Fae War didn't completely overtake Eddi's life. In so many fantasy books when the protagonist is swept off to deal with the problem plaguing the Fae folk, their lives become completely about that, but no one seems to have missed them when they return. In War for the Oaks, Eddi continues to struggle with her everyday, real life too, worrying about paying her rent and buying groceries. It made the book seem so much more realistic, if that's a word that can be applied to a fantasy novel.

All in all, I thought that Bull did a wonderful job of weaving the two worlds together and drawing the reader in. The story had substance and the plot was strong and engaging.

I would recommend this book to anyone who likes fantasy or supernatural novels.
11 people found this helpful
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A Bit Hollow

_War for the Oaks_ is supposed to be a classic of the Urban Fantasy genre. I found it an engaging read, but classic? Not to me.
The concept, that the armies of the Sidhe are duking it out for control of Minneapolis and must have a human on the battlefield to make death stick, is great. I also liked the depiction of the musician's life; as a working musician myself, I could definitely see that Bull knew what she was talking about in that quarter.
But as a whole, the story stuck me as hollow. When I was finished, I kept worrying it like the gap from a missing tooth. Everything just seemed like too much of a lark, too pat. The people died who were obviously going to die. The outcome was obvious. The relationships were obvious. Whenever something could have gone on to make a deeper statement, Bull shied away from it.
****SPOILER****
I was also really disappointed that Bull felt she had to make Eddi and the Phooka lovers by the end. I thought the Phooka was much more interesting without that -- or interesting enough that it seemed unnecessary. And as for Eddi, well, can't a woman exist in a fantasy without ending up in a sexual relationship? It just seemed pointless, and I couldn't believe in it.
All in all, good candy, but it left me wanting a real meal.
11 people found this helpful
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So so

This was not such a great book for me. Granted it was not bad but it did not hold my attention. I found I did not care so much for the characters especially the protagonist. Also I found all the music and band jargon tedious.
8 people found this helpful
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This in my "go-to" book....

the one that, when I have nothing new to read, I go back to the shelf and pick this one up again. And again. I am thrilled that it has finally been reprinted - I wore my old copy out. That first copy was given to me as a gift, and was my first experience with the urban faerie genre. I've read every urban faerie novel I can get my hands on since, hoping to find another one this delightful. So far, no luck.
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One of my favorite novels. Ever.

I bought my copy of Emma Bull's War for the Oaks in 1987, from the science fiction bookstore that used to be in Harvard Square. I had no idea what the book was about, but it had a staff tag marked "Recommended!!!" I think the three exclamation marks convinced me.

Twenty years later, my copy of the book has a broken spine, the cover image is worn, and my name is scribbled inside because I've loaned it to friends so often (always with dire warnings about the doom to befall if the book did not return). That's because this is among my favorite fantasy novels ever. I've no idea how often I've re-read the story; it simply doesn't get stale. It's like a favorite old movie, a comfy sweater, or comfort-food for the soul; I re-read War for the Oaks when I want to be reassured that the world really will be all right, that love is real, all that kind of stuff. And also, when I want to laugh.

I can't believe I haven't reviewed it before.

At its essence, the story is an oft-told one: a human who becomes a pawn in a war between supernatural factions. Only Emma Bull twisted the plot deliciously. Instead of a folk musician or some kind of back-to-the-land hippie, in WftO the protagonist is Eddi McCandry, a guitar-playing rock-and-roll musician in downtown Minneapolis, who is called upon to bring mortality to the Faerie battle. Her antagonist (or is he?) is the phouka, a man who can change into a dog. The story includes honor, and love, and music, and laughter, in equal measure... well, maybe with the balance tilted towards laughter.

But it'd be possible to tell that story cleverly in a "Nice, what's next?" way. Emma Bull carried this off to perfection. The people in the book are all, ALL, believable and utterly real to me, even the "fantasy" ones. The music references -- and there are many! -- are great. Eddi and her band play music through most of the book, and WftO's references caused me to explore all sorts of artists that I'd never heard of before (like [[ASIN:B0000060PH Boiled in Lead]] and [[ASIN:B000002UA7 Kate Bush]]) who've since become part of the soundtrack of my life.

And mostly, the writing -- especially the repartee -- is wonderful. When the phouka dresses for battle -- he wears an olive drab high-necked sweater, with suede gun patches on the shoulders, with matching olive slacks tucked into high brown boots -- Eddi thinks, "He looked like a guerrilla outfitted by Ralph Lauren." And says, "Never dress better than your date." Well, maybe you need more context. But my point is that the dark fantasy -- it *is* about a war -- is considerably lightened by the smartass camaraderie of friendship.

I love this book. If you like fantasy, but not the icky-sweet kind, you'll love it too.
7 people found this helpful