Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan
Paperback Tales of the Slayer: Volume 4 Book

ISBN: 068986955X

ISBN13: 9780689869556

Tales of the Slayer: Volume 4

(Part of the Buffy the Vampire Slayer Series and Tales of the Slayer (#4) Series)

"I can't be...just a person, I can't be helpless like that...." -- Buffy, "Helpless" At eighteen, each Slayer must face a terrifying trial: the Tento di Cruciamentum. This time-honored, albeit cruel,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Acceptable

$18.39
Save $0.56!
List Price $18.95
Almost Gone, Only 1 Left!

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Read It!

Perfect book and awesome series!

Just Like the others a 5 star review

I love the Tales of The Slayer books they are great this one is no different.

Exploring the cruel and stupid ritual of the Cruciamentum

The authors who contributed original short stories to "Tales of the Slayer, Volume 4" are constrained by having to write about the Tento di Cruciamentum. This is the rite of passage first introduced in Season Three of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" in the episode "Helpless" (written by David Fury), that is administered to Slayers when they reach their 18th birthday. Drained of her powers by her Watcher, the Slayer is forced to vanquish a vampire using only her wits. Buffy defeated Kralik, her vampire foe, but because Giles defied the authority of the Watcher's Council to aid Buffy he is fired by Quentin Rravers for violating the test rules (and because he has a father's love for his Slayer). What was important in terms of the third season story arc was the Giles was fired, to be replaced, in a manner of speaking, by the bumbling Wesley Wyndham-Pryce, but in this collection of stories we have to deal with the legacy of the Cruciamentum. If you want you can skip this paragraph to get to the review of the stories, because I am going to start ranting now about how the Cruciamentum is a stupid idea. First, how did the Watcher's Council come up with this stupid idea? They would have to either stumble upon the drugs that strip the Slayer of her powers or they went looking for it, and in that latter case the question becomes why they felt this was necessary. We still do not know the story of the true origin of the Cruciamentum, but my best guess would be that the arrogant men of the Watcher's Council had a Slayer or too that they would rather see dead than have to deal with (probably because of issues of class, ethnicity, and/or race). Second, why would they think this stupid idea was a good thing to put Slayer's through? I do not see how it could be an improvement on the previous status quo. You can quote Nietzsche all you want, and someone in this collection does, but a traumatic experience is more likely to make you really ticked off rather than stronger. Besides, if a Watcher has not been teaching a Slayer to use their brains as well as their brawn, then I do not see why the Slayer has to play the ultimate price. So like Riker being able to hear Troi's thoughts on the pilot for "STNG," the Cruciamentum is something that needed to be forgotten and not embraced. However, that is too late now, so we turn to reviewing the stories in "Tales of the Slayer, Volume 4": "It's All About the Mission" by Nancy Holder, set in the Harlem of 1973, is the one story that covers familiar ground as the Slayer turning 18 is Nikki Wood, who would eventually be killed by Spike, but not before she gave birth to the man who would be the last principal of Sunnydale High School. Nikki's Watcher, Bernard Crowley, knows exactly how idiotic the whole ritual is, and while Holder tries to deal with this in the story's resolution, the fact that it involves another familiar character from the Buffy mythos actually undercuts her point. Still, this story does a nice job o

Tales of the Cruciamentum

The eight tales in this book deal with slayers facing the cruel test called The Cruciamentum, in which a slayer is deliberately weakened and, on her 18th birthday, must face a vampire alone, using only her wits. Most of the stories take place in 20th century North America, 2 in New York, 1 in Chicago just before the onset of Prohibition, 1 in rural Pennsylvania, 1 in a small town in Nebraska, and 1 in Nova Scotia. The other two are set in 1876 Ireland and 1981 Seville, during the Spanish Inquisition, which I found to be the most interesting of the lot. The Grand Inquisitor Tomas de Torquemada makes an appearance in this one. The stories have an interesting variety, considering that the subject of all of them is the same. One girl is a pacifist, not wanting to be the Slayer any more. Another is a carnival performer. Two are Jewish and, for that reason, are probably less than beloved of the Watcher's Council. I found the story Survivors to be quite sad, as Dot's Watcher, who left to fight in World War I, has descended into melancholia and perhaps madness. Dot virtually becomes his caretaker as he lapses into delusion. Two Teenage Girls at the Mall, told by a 16 year old newly made female vampire, is also very sad, making the reader wish that somehow there could be a positive resolution for both the Slayer and Julie, the vampire. The first story, It's All About the Mission, deals with Nikki Wood, who is pregnant with her son Robin, who will become the principal of Sunnydale High School one day. We all know that she will eventually be killed by Spike, so the focus of the story is how she survives rather than if she will survive. In the story Undeadsville, the Slayer Zoe Kuryakin refers to her cousin Illya, who is studying in Russia. Could he become one of the Men from U.N.C.L.E., portrayed by David McCallum? It wouldn't surprise me if it was meant to be a reference to the popular television show of the 60's! In an earlier volume in this series, reference was made to "the doxy Darla." She is mentioned again as a friend of hers says, "Has ever a Slayer met her end in such a delightfully slapstick manner? I shall have to tell Darla about this when next we meet. She's bound to find the tale uproarious." That was quite clever. It's rather surprising that we see so little of the vampires from the Order of Aurelius--Darla, Angelus, Drusilla, and William the Bloody--in these stories. Quentin Travers does make an appearance, and he was every bit as unpleasant then as he is in the present time. These are interesting stories, fun and quick to read. I recommend them.
Copyright © 2024 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured