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5.0étoiles sur 5
Highly recommended, Mai 25 2004
Kate Elliott is one of those authors that understands that to write is to create art and when creating art you are trying to evoke some sort of emotion within your audience, and at that she succeeds admirably. She has a talent that many others lack and that is making you fall in love with the characters. I've read a lot of books and the ones that I find myself reading over and over again are the ones where the characters become like old friends, only in a more personal way, because you know all about their passions, and fears, their hopes and dreams. I find myself desperately awaiting the next book in this series so that I can find out what happens to these fictional characters that have become so important to me as the story has progressed. I recommend this series to anyone who enjoys fantasy novels, although I would suggest starting at the beginning.
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4.0étoiles sur 5
The end is coming, Sep 20 2003
Par Un client
Book 4 was a disappointment, but this book redeemed the series. Looking forward to reading the final story.
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4.0étoiles sur 5
Gathering pace, Sep 1 2003
The fifth volume in the 'Crown of Stars' saga, The Gathering storm, has been a long time coming (duly noted by the apologetic author) but the delay has been worth it. We find ourselves trailing two Eagles, Hanna and Hathui, the former riding to join Sanglant and Sapientia who have gone to Jinn trailing Bulkezu as their prisoner, the latter heading towards King Henry who has been possessed, the Skopos and the insidious Hugh. Amongst this the small fervent band of 'heretics', numbering Sigfrid, Ivar and the beautiful Baldwin amongst them end up at the monastry where Alain is desperately attempting to forget who he is and seek peaceful obscurity. It is 733, Prince Bayan and Margrave Judith are dead, Prince Ekkhard has now married the new margrave and all of Novaria is under constant siege and assailment from all sides. King Henry steps ever closer towards becoming emperor, attempting to achieve the glory of Taillafer, but is becoming increasingly controlled, suspicious and removed frm his subjects as he seeks to unite Varre and Wendar. We focus on events are Ivar and company struggle to understand where they lost three years, watch as Hanna rescues Ivar's half-sister, Rosvita, and flees with Sister Obligatia away from Hugh. The bulk of the novel is given over to Sanglant's 'taming' of the griffin, Bulkezu's death (surprisingly casually handled given the import ascribed to him early on), Liath's return and their subsequent use of the Crowns to race west to confront Anne who is using Henry's army to conquer all lands that possess what are in fact, henges in order to recreate the cataclysm and allow the Cursed Ones back into the world. Several sub-plots weave their separate paths: Alain and the Skrolin, Brother Zaccharias and his dicspla as a mathematica, Hanna and Sister Rosvita, the love triangle of Anna, Thiemo and Matto and many more besides, all the time shadowed by the revolutionary Eika, Stronghand who has conquered Alba and Presbyter Hugh whose insidious perfidy threatens far more than initially thought... The early focus leans much towards the reconiliation of preceived 'heresy', Elliott choosing to introduce the age old dilemma that widespread use of science can only reduce the spiritual power of the church and this latest installment moving more and more towards a religious commentary where inevitable parallels are intimated. Making heavy use of 'portals' to get around with inconsistent time serves to speed up the action considerably as we track the momentous events that lead us towards the final volume. Elliot's series is, perhaps, not quite on a technical par with Jordan, or even Goodkind, but the depth of imagination rivals Donaldson. The unfortunate point is that the complexity of character and plot and the length of time it has taken Elliott to produce this fifth novel means that, to get the very best out of it, you need to reread the preceding novel, otherwise names and places and plots become faintly vague and difficult to recollect. Nevertheless, this is another excellent installment and a must for any fan of the genre
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