The Golden Fool
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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- 4,49 €
Publisher Description
'Fantasy as it ought to be written' George R.R. Martin
The second book in Robin Hobb’s thrilling fantasy series returns readers to the Six Duchies and the magical world of the Fitz and the Fool.
Fitz has been persuaded back to court, posing as a servant to the decadent Lord Golden (who is the Fool in disguise). In secret, he will train Prince Dutiful in the magic known as the Skill.
The peace remains fragile, so the diplomatic wedding between Dutiful and the Outislander princess is a crucial alliance. But when Elliania arrives she challenges the prince to undertake an impossible quest before she will accept him.
He must kill Icefyre, one of the last true dragons. And Fitz and the Fool must go with him…
Reviews
'Hobb is one of the great modern fantasy writers… what makes her novels as addictive as morphine is not just their imaginative brilliance but the way her characters are compromised and manipulated by politics'
The Times
‘Hobb is a remarkable storyteller’ Guardian
'Robin Hobb writes achingly well'
SFX
About the author
Robin Hobb is one of the world’s finest writers of epic fiction.She was born in California in 1952 but raised in Alaska, where she learned how to raise a wolf cub, to skin a moose and to survive in the wilderness. When she married a fisherman who fished herring and the Kodiak salmon-run for half the year, these skills would stand her in good stead. She raised her family, ran a smallholding, delivered post to her remote community, all at the same time as writing stories and novels. She succeeded on all fronts, raising four children and becoming an internationally best-selling writer. She lives in Tacoma, Washington State.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Blindness comes in many forms. For angst-ridden FitzChivalry Farseer, the blindness isn't physical but rather an inability to gauge character. Fitz, the hero of this second volume in the trilogy that began with Fool's Errand (2002), reluctantly returns, disguised as a servant, to Buckkeep town in the Six Duchies to be skill-master to Prince Dutiful, the king-in-waiting. Fitz is mourning the loss of his wolf bondmate Nighteyes, hating his disguise, worrying about his foster son's behavior in Buckkeep and frantically trying to learn enough about the Skill to stay ahead of the prince during their training sessions. Fitz jumps from crisis to crisis like a bowling ball tossed onto a trampoline his failure to look deeply at others' motivations plunges him into a morass of poorly thought-out actions and badly managed confrontations. The harder Fitz tries, the worse his situation gets. The author juggles all the balls with aplomb, besides providing spot-on characterizations. The intrigue and double-dealing of the Farseer royal court are spider webs of interconnections, while the plot itself keeps the reader bouncing from one theory to another, right up to the somewhat abrupt ending. The writing may not be quite as fine as that in Hobb's Assassins series (Assassin's Apprentice, etc.), but this latest nonetheless shows why she ranks near the top of the high fantasy field. FYI:Robin Hobb is the pseudonym of Megan Lindholm.
Customer Reviews
5/5 hardly gives this justice
After giving 5/5 on the previous book, I feel I don’t do justice on this. The developments are happening nonstop, there’s no way you can stop reading! I must have read this in a day. I couldn’t stop for any reason..
In contrast with the previous book, the action here is non-stop as I mentioned. It’s not physical action, it’s mostly intrigue, secrets, lies and lies and lies and more lies building an inescapable situation which can only lead to sadness.
The main difference from other books you read is the level of realism on the difficulties the heroes face and the fact that our protagonist is not an unrealistic prodigy. He is not the best fighter, he is not the best in any magic by far, he is not very pretty or very young or super clever. The ‘good team’ joins their strengths to solve their problems, not everyone agrees and we see how different viewpoints have their merit and how people with good motives end up in bad situations and make bad decisions.
Everyone makes mistakes and they pay for them. Choices don’t always offer a positive outcome.
Frankly, I could be writing for hours but if you have experienced Hobb’s excellence before, you know of what I mean and there’s hardly anything new I can add.
What I want to say is that if you are a parent you read this through a different lens. It’s amazingly well done.
What I didn’t like? Well, I was not emotionally swayed, as in liveship traders part3 for instance. Maybe on the final book?
The ending was also … abrupt? It’s more like part1 and part2 with the next book since this one’s ending could be just any other chapter I suppose.
This is an extraordinary book, read it