The Traitor
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- ¥1,500
発行者による作品情報
In this “gritty, heart-pounding” (John Gwynne) conclusion to the New York Times bestselling fantasy trilogy, The Covenant of Steel, Alwyn must make a difficult decide between his heart and his morals as he prepares for his final battle.
It’s been a long journey for Alwyn Scribe. Born a bastard and raised an outlaw, he’s now a knight and the most trusted advisor to Lady Evadine Courlain. Together they’ve won countless battles and helped to bring order to a fractured kingdom. Yet Evadine is not the woman Alwyn once knew. As puritanical fury increasingly replaces her benevolent faith, Alwyn begins to question what her true motives really are. As the kingdom braces itself for one final battle, Alwyn’s conscience fights its own war with his heart. Now, more than ever, he must decide whose side he’s really on.
"This makes a rich treat for George R. R. Martin fans." —Publishers Weekly (starred review) on The Pariah
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Ryan's masterful conclusion to his Covenant of Steel epic fantasy trilogy picks up where 2022's The Martyr left off in the unpredictable arc of its morally ambiguous lead, Alwyn Scribe, who now serves as the right hand of Evadine Courlain. Evadine, the supposedly divinely resurrected Risen Martyr, aspires to unify warring kingdoms as their Ascendant Queen, ostensibly to avert an impending apocalyptic event called the Second Scourge. But Alwyn, whose relationship with Evadine became much more intimate in The Martyr, begins to doubt her intentions after she asks him to lie for the first time. Those concerns are magnified by suggestions from others that Evadine is a servant of the Malecite, "the wellspring of evil in the world," leaving the reader in suspense as to whether the "traitor" in the book's title will turn out to be Alwyn or Evadine. Ryan's thoughtful characterizations and complex plotting are on clear display, enhanced by his evocative prose ("Night had the effect of transforming the great spire of Martyr Athil's cathedral into an ominous black spike, its jagged, buttressed flanks catching a scattering of abstract, flickering shadows from the many campfires littering the city below"). This sends the series out on a high note.