The Fell Sword
The historical fantasy with battle scenes full of authenticity
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4,3 • 4 betyg
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- 75,00 kr
Utgivarens beskrivning
The second book in the TRAITOR SON CYCLE, a radical reinvention of the Arthurian legend by an expert on medieval history and warfare.
Loyalty can be expensive. Betrayal, on the other hand, is free.
With the Emperor taken hostage, the Red Knight and his band of mercenaries find themselves in high demand - and surrounded by enemies. The land is in revolt, the capital is besieged and victory will be hard won and hard paid for. And The Red Knight has a plan...
But can he negotiate all of his battlefields - political, magical, real and romantic - at the same time? And can he be victorious on them all, or will he find himself stretched too thin?
The second standalone novel in THE TRAITOR SON CYCLE by the acclaimed historical novelist Christian Cameron provides more of his trademark battles, political machinations and convincing characters.
Readers can't put down The Fell Sword:
'I loved the setting of The Fell Sword and all of it's bright, shiny, polished medieval-doings' Goodreads reviewer ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
'An amazingly complex story with plots and subplots that pull you right into the world' Goodreads reviewer, ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
'Amazing battle scenes yet again, cinematic and exquisite detail' Goodreads reviewer, ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
'I have heard the Traitor Son Cycle compared to the Malazan Book of the Fallen, and I clearly see that. It's got the scope, the diverse cast of characters, the many interweaving storylines . . . I can't wait to see where this goes' Goodreads reviewer, ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
'Takes the reader into the depths of the politics of the world, a truly dark murky, back stabbing politics, politics fueled by ambition and magic . . . It's exactly what a middle book should be, if not more' Goodreads reviewer, ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This dense sequel to The Red Knight throws readers into a vast maelstrom of political intrigue as various forces fight to control the emperor's throne in the capital city of Liviapolis. The Duke of Thrake's initial plot to overthrow his cousin is foiled when an alert guard shuts the city gates against the duke's forces, but he succeeds in capturing the emperor. Irene, the emperor's daughter, claims the throne and struggles to gather defenders. Foremost of these is the Red Knight, an infamous mercenary captain with a company of loyal lances. Even the Red Knight's skills may not be enough to save the empire, given that the sorcerers of Liviapolis's vaunted magical academy don't exactly support Irene, the weird forces of the alien Wild have been stirred up, and the Red Knight himself is struggling against the possessing spirit of the sorcerer Harmodius. Cameron makes it easy for new readers to use this complex volume as a starting point for the series.
Kundrecensioner
Im not sure how i feel.
I mean for a book with identical cover art as the previous book in the series i expected at least SOME continuity but i guess that was too much to ask, at least there are fewer spelling errors in this one so either the translator or the writer learned something between book one and two but in that same time the somehow forgot the names of several characters and who had already met who in the first book, things like Ser Jehannes becoming Ser Jehan in the same sentence as they recruited almost four hundred new people creates a lot of confusion over if its the same character as the one from last book (i think it is since the role and personality matches), there are still some internal inconsistencies and typos in places but compared to the previous book it is quite the improvement.
I still have issues with most of the cast talking like angsty teens (except the one actual angsty teen who just mopes) who cant plan further than their noses while the author tries to make out half of them as intellectuals and other characters saying and thinking that they are so amazingly calm and smart.
There feels like there are some things that dont translate well or the author didnt research such as Thorn finding thorn trees(?) at five metres or so, people weaving raspberry plants as protective walls, illustrations of the kings armor showing an open face but when another character wore it people didnt see the difference despite one being blonde and one being dark haired and having a beard, boglins changed to boggles without anyone saying anything, creatures of the wilderness (composed of everything between giant velociraptors to giant insects and talking bears) call giants giants but humans keep using the weird magical name for them instead of the "oh my its a giant humanoid" reaction of naming things.
Overall its better than the previous but it still has issues, the main story is fine and this book explains more of the rules behind magic which was interesting, but the text and internal fact checking needs some work.