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Most helpful customer reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
A very entertaining read!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Diamond Throne (Mass Market Paperback)
I have purchased all of Eddings' fantasy novels and I admit that I have read all of them at least 5 times over. Although the characters and plots are quite traditional (the requisite thief, knights,royalty,magic,etc.), what makes me recommend his books is the certain fun you will get from reading them. I really recommend these novels to anybody who wants an entertaining evening at home with a book in one hand and a pack of chips in the other! I would not call his books "serious" (unlike Robin Hobb's excellent Assasin series). Still, it is obvious that Eddings puts much thought into each of his characters, and I think you will find yourself liking even the most minor of characters in the series for what he/she adds to the story. His characters are all the type of people you would like to meet in real life; full of honor, humor, wit, loyalty, feeling and strength. Sparhawk's adventures are a bit more fastpaced than that of Garion's (the very first series) and you will definitely find common elements in both of them. The younger reader will enjoy Garion's story (as I did when I started out) but older readers will appreciate the great humour and fun to be found amoungst Sparhawk and his fellow knights. We can't always be in the mood for 'serious' fantasy and fiction...grab an Eddings book for some fun and relaxation instead!
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great characters make for a great book,
By Ashley Megan "amazonfox" (Vernon, CT United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Diamond Throne (Mass Market Paperback)
Although Eddings wrote his "Belgariad" series first, the "Elenium" was the first of his series I read. Therefore, my comments will tend to be skewed in favor of the Elenium, although most readers who read the Belgariad first will be more in favor of that series. It's a direct result of the fact that Edding's major flaw is a tendency to plagiarize himself, rather obviously. Therefore, if two books or plots are all but identical, the second one will almost invariably be set in your mind as a poorer copy. Anyways. The story opens with an old and battered knight, Sparhawk, returning home to the kingdom of Elenia after ten years of exile. The old king who exiled him is dead, and the new Queen Ehlana, whom Sparhawk tutored as a child, has pardoned him. But when he gets home, he finds that Ehlana came down with a deathly illness shortly after her coronation, and that to save her life, Sparhawk's old teacher in magic, the Styric sorceress Sephrenia, has placed her in a state of suspended animation, frozen in a block of crystal. Before they can bring her out, they have to find a cure for whatever illness Ehlana has. Sparhawk, of course, immediately signs up for the quest to save his queen. Along the way, he picks up various companions, including four other knights from various kingdoms, in a sort of joint effort of unity among the many orders of knights. That's the explanation given, at least, although of course the real reason is that Eddings absolutely loves creating secondary characters, and a quest story is always better the more people there are involved. There's plenty of sword-and-sorcery, a few monsters, but not so much that you feel like you're alienated from the universe he's in. (I think he does a much better job in this respect here than with the Belgariad, but again that's just me.) Say what you will, but Eddings really is good at creating characters that you can truly like and care about. And you can never go wrong with your basic quest story, which gets wonderful treatment here. I love this series, and "Diamond Throne" is an excellent start to it.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Fine Story,
By jrmspnc (Maryland, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Diamond Throne (Mass Market Paperback)
David Eddings knows how to tell a story. The Diamond Throne spins a tale of an occasionally sarcastic Church knight who must protect both his Order and his Queen from evil plots. The story moves across a continent which, fortunately, does not contain the mock-antiquity cultures we saw in the Belgariad. This is pretty much straight up Middle-Ages land, fleshed out just enough to keep the plot moving.As with the Belgariad, there is nothing original here - a rehash of other fantasy stories. Eddings' style requires some forgiveness by older readers. It seems like every time the main character speaks, Eddings rolls a die to see which other character gets to say, "Well spoken, Sparhawk!" Eddings also expects the reader to instantly have tremendous affection for each of the heroes, but his forced banter between them doesn't cut it. Arguably the biggest shortfall is the lack of true depth. The world of The Elenium is dominated by a Church whose theology is only vaguely discussed. What an opportunity to explore issues of spirituality, piety in an organized religion, devotion and hypocrisy - an opportunity completely wasted. But then one has to expect that from David Eddings. His books are always Fantasy Lite. There's no effort to explore deep issues, thus avoiding the pretentiousness of a Robert Jordan. There's no melodrama, either. The Diamond Throne is light entertainment, a fun read that taxes the brain cells not at all. It's rather like watching television, only without the commercials.
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