Dossouye

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Dossouye
Dossouye 2008, Sword and Soul Media
Cover of Dossouye 2008 Sword and Soul Media
AuthorCharles R. Saunders
Cover artistMshindo Kumba
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesDossouye
GenreFantasy
Published2008 Sword and Soul Media
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages193 pp
Preceded bynone 
Followed byDossouye: The Dancers of Mulukau 

Dossouye is a sword and sorcery novel by American writer Charles R. Saunders, and published independently in 2008 by Sword & Soul Media via the online press Lulu.[1] In 2012, Saunders published a sequel Dossouye: The Dancers of Mulukau.[2]

Background[edit]

Dossouye is a fix-up novel created of the short stories "Agbewe's Sword", "Gimmile's Songs", "Shiminege’s Mask", "Marwe’s Forest", and "Obenga’s Drum", the last previously unpublished. Dossouye herself is a woman warrior inspired by the real-life female warriors of the West African Kingdom of Dahomey. Her first stories appeared in Jessica Amanda Salmonson's Amazons![3] and Marion Zimmer Bradley's Sword and Sorceress,[4] two anthologies designed to increase the number and recognition of female heroes in sword and sorcery fiction. Agbewe's Sword was adapted by Saunders himself in the screenplay of the film Amazons (1986).[5]

Synopsis[edit]

Orphaned at a young age, Dossouye becomes a soldier in the women’s army of the kingdom of Abomey. In a war against the rival kingdom of Abanti, Dossouye saves her people from certain destruction; but a cruel twist of fate compels her to go into exile.

Mounted on her mighty war-bull, Gbo, Dossouye enters the vast rainforest beyond the borders of her homeland, seeking a place to call her own.

The forest is where Dossouye will either find a new purpose in life... or find her life cut short by the many menaces she encounters.

Setting[edit]

An alternate Africa like continent which goes unnamed throughout the novel

List of characters[edit]

The characters in this section are listed in their order of appearance.

  • Dossouye – a former member of the women's army of Abomey who goes into self-imposed exile to protect the beliefs of her people
  • Gimmile – a song teller cursed by Legba who Dossouye encounters
  • Marwe – a shapechanger, a spirit of the forest that Dossouye encounters

Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^ Fiction Review: Dossouye by Charles R. Saunders
  2. ^ Dossouye: The Dancers of Mulukau
  3. ^ Jessica Amanda Salmonson (March 17, 2009). "Wild Realm Reviews: Golden Temple Amazons". Film Reviews at The Weird Wild Realm of Paghat the Ratgirl. Retrieved 2009-10-08.
  4. ^ Looking Back on the first Sword and Sorceress
  5. ^ Mistaken Indetidy

External links[edit]