Threshold
is one of my favourites of my books. Fantasy, but
completely different from The Axis Trilogy or
The Wayfarer Redemption.
Threshold
is middle-eastern rather than medieval ... or perhaps
medieval middle-eastern. Yes, that's it. It is not
a heroic fantasy in the same sense that the Axis books
are, and it doesn't follow the same fantasy formula
that I used there.
It
is the story of Ashdod, a land where mathematician
Magi hold sway. The Magi worship the number One, as
the number from which all other numbers emanate, and
into which all other numbers eventually collapse.
In a sense, then, the number One represents immortality
- or Infinity (yes, you guessed it, I've based much
of this on sacred Pythagorean mathematics). Several
generations before the events of the book, the Magi
had conceived of the perfect mathematical formula
which will enable them to touch, and eventually step
into, Infinity. In essence, to merge with the One.
This
mathematical formula is expressed as a building, Threshold,
with the Infinity Chamber at its heart. Threshold
is a pyramid (unfortunate to use yet again the pyramid,
but I must because of the pyramid's mathematical properties)
made of glass, and most of the prime characters, apart
from the Magi themselves, are glass workers, slaves
on the construction site.
Threshold
is told in the first person through the eyes of one
of the glass workers, Tirzah. We learn of her very
peculiar relationship with the glass, and the danger
this places her in with the Magi. With Tirzah, we
come to the realization that there is something very
seriously wrong with Threshold, and that the Magi
are not able to control the ways in which the formula
is warping. Eventually, Threshold transforms into
something that no-one, Magus or glass worker, can
control. Threshold was supposed to be a bridge, a
bridge to enable the Magi to merge with Infinity and
the One. Instead, something comes across the bridge
from the other side ... from Infinity.
The
world of Threshold continues in Darkglass
Mountain.
Read
the opening chapters
of Threshold.