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, by Scott Ciencin
Download PDF , by Scott Ciencin
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Product details
File Size: 3460 KB
Print Length: 355 pages
Publisher: Wizards of the Coast (December 13, 2011)
Publication Date: December 13, 2011
Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
Language: English
ASIN: B005UFN5M0
Text-to-Speech:
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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#152,246 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
The book has plot elements of a very interesting story, but the execution is pretty shaky. It's as though the author were given a D&D module and told, "Make a novel out of this."The novel is very driven by the plot, and by that I mean it has a series of plot points that it has to hit and everything revolves around getting to the next plot point. It doesn't matter if getting to the next plot point is realistic, feasible, interesting, or well-described. Some group of people (fighter, wizard, cleric, thief) does this, then they do this, then they do this, then done.Characters are pretty flat. Everyone sounds exactly the same, and you are typically given one or two descriptors that become the "hook" to reference that character. For some reason, the author does not like to use the character names or pronouns, but instead refers to them with the "hook." Kelemvor is "the fighter," and 90% of the time, he is referred to as "the fighter." The fighter did this. The fighter did that. The fighter replied. Every character is treated this way. This fighter has reddish skin, so even though you know his name right off the bat, he's "the red-skinned fighter" in every sentence. There's one scene that I think is supposed to be mysterious and foreboding, but it's hard to get into the spirit of it when the main character in that scene is "the bald man," and the bald man enters a dark area, and the bald man does this, and the bald man does that, and the bald man's party steps in to support the bald man, and the bald man balds the bald man bald man bald man.The main group is generally referred to as "the heroes" despite containing very few actual heroes. This gets especially difficult in the next book when "the heroes" contains at least one villain.The deities are incredibly incompetent and their machinations have all the complexity of Skeletor or Wile E. Coyote. At no point was I ever afraid of or in awe of Bane. He just seemed terrible at being evil or conquering anything.The book also does a lot of telling instead of showing, and this is writing 101. You don't declare things about the characters or declare that events happened by fiat - you actually narrate events and let the reader draw their own conclusions. One example among many is that, when "the heroes" meet up with the men following "the bald man," we are told that Cyric (the thief) had tested his skill with a dagger against one of the bald man's men (the albino) and (the albino) had proven almost his equal. This is just declared to us in one sentence. We don't know what happened. We don't know how they tested their skill or what the outcome was. We're just told they did this and it turns out that the albino is pretty good. So, there you go.This declarative way of advancing the story occurs all over the place in ways big and small. It's almost as if the main characters can't be portrayed as heroes, so they're declared to be heroic (over and over again). Events tend to be very generic or summed up in a few words because they're unimportant. Dialogue is unimportant. The characters' personalities are unimportant. Nothing is important except getting to the next "stop" in the plot.Unfortunately, the next book is written in a very similar way, but worse. I'd recommend just going to a website or Wiki page to learn the events that happened in this book so you'll know them for later books in the series (written by a different author). It's not a short book, so you're in for a real slog. I'm very forgiving of fantasy literature, realizing it isn't typically the state of the literary art, but this was really difficult to get through.
Not going to lie. I loved the beginning. I thought that this novel was going to be amazing despite all of the negative reviews. It was getting that way tremendously but about a little over midway in, it started to die. I found the four characters beginning to get annoying, especially Adon. I feel like the author isn't giving Bane enough credit as to how villainous he should be. The concept of the Gods walking the Realms is fantastic and that was the main reason why I wanted to read this series. Since I have began it, I will continue the rest since I have already have all of the books. Seeing the rest of the amazon reviews, it appears it isn't going to get any better until the last two books. I hope so.Off to read Tantras now.
Item was less than advertised condition,although still in readable condition. Spine was broken which if advertised would have made me buy from a different place. I have since bought a replacement to keep.
This book seems like the first draft of an eighth grade English student. By far the worst writing I've ever seen from a professionally published book. Random magical events abound for no reason. Characters behave randomly or fall in love and no motivation is given or even hinted at. I tried to power through so I could read the rest of the series but then I saw that the next book is written by the same person, so screw that.
It was decent but the story line between Kelemvor being the strong silent type and the mage trying to get him to open up got old after the 50th time. Tried to develop too many stories simultaneously while only being able to scratch the surface of them never getting that pull that makes you addicted for more. Also found the "magic instability" in the story to be a frustrating "twist".
I have been reading books set in the Forgotten Realms for awhile and lately I have become interested in the major happenings that have often been alluded to in other books. I am most especially interested in Cyric and how he became a god. But after enjoying stories of set in the forgotten realms by authors such as R.A. Salvatore, Elaine Cunningham, and Paul Kemp this read was like seeing my 8 eight year old make an attempt at writing a novel. Yikes and yuck! There was absolutely no connection or depth to the characters and it seemed as if the author was writing from a script that he was handed; I basically chewed through half the book before I began skimming pages however, even that offered little respite due to the fact that my eye was inevitably drawn to the overused opening of hundreds of sentences "The heroes..." like a fly is drawn to manure. Gah! Even though I am curious about the events that transpired in the Forgotten Realms I am not risking a brain aneurysm by buying another book in this series.
The basic story of this book is a very good one, unfortunately there are times where it seems the author just couldn't come up with something interesting. There are incidents in the book that happen that just don't make any sense. Granted there is supposed to be an explanation in the background of the story, but the author uses it way too much. While trying to make the world seem completely out of whack, all the author succeds in doind is make you go "What the heck is that there for?"One strong point of the book is the storyline and the characters involved. This is just the beginning of the trilogy and all the necessary ground work has been layed. The author does provide good insight into the hero characters, while providing just enough information the adversary to make things interesting.I did enjoy this book overall so I'm giving it three stars, and I am definetly looking forward to Tantras when I think things will really start to get interesting.
I liked the story but either the writing itself or the narrator (I listened to the audio for all of the book) kept be from being drawn in. It felt unreal and did not draw me into the world.
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