The Solver - Store
Buy crossword, anagram, sudoku related products
|
Home page
|
Wednesday, 17 August 2005 |
|
Current Store: UK Store
Books : Brisingr (Inheritance Cycle)Related Items:
Editorial Review: Amazon.co.uk Review: The Inheritance Cycle by Christopher Paolini -- of which Brisingr is the latest -- shows every sign of becoming one of the most exuberant and entertaining fiction sequences in modern writing, with a scope and ambition that genuinely takes the breath away. This is a fantasy world which is cleverly designed to appeal to the widest possible range of readership; the inevitable echoes of JRR Tolkien are transformed into something rich and strange here, and the events of the earlier books are being drawn together in the later developments with masterly assurance. After the massive, punishing battle against the Warriors of the Empire, Eragon and Saphira are licking their wounds, having barely survived. The Rider and his dragon have an oath to fulfil; they must aid Katrina in escaping the most terrible danger. What follows is an epic journey, quite as action-packed and vividly described as anything in fantasy fiction. As in all the best such literature, the odds are overwhelming, nothing can be taken at face value, and the evil forces ranged against the protagonists are as vile as one could wish. Christopher Paolini clearly now feels that he has readers securely in his pocket, and is prepared to take his time to achieve some of his best effects -- a tactic that pays dividends. So often with fantasy fiction, outlandish situations are relied upon to carry the action, and there is no shortage of them here. But Paolini is canny enough to realise that the characterisation of an endangered protagonist is crucial to maintain our involvement, and (as in previous books), he always takes care of business in this regard. Don't be put off by the daunting length of this book -- Paolini justifies every word in Brisingr. You'll find yourself reading it as quickly as many a shorter book. --Barry Forshaw Average Rating:
![]() Rating: - Don't do it .......This is just awful. I tolerated the first two being both derivative and badly written and put it down to a young author finding his feet. But this is the worse of the three. The book is predictable in extreme as the young hero lives out the author's adolescent Dungeons and Dragons adventures. I tried. I really really tried but half way through I abandoned it. I was sick of falling out of the world he almost creates when he insists on using a 'big' word trying to impress ... Read More Rating: - Finally growing upMy biggest dissapointment? Getting to page 749 and: "Here ends the third book (...) the story will continue and conclude in book four." Urg! I waited for ages. When will I find out what happens in the end? However I was delighted to see that Mr Paolini has finally put down the lexecon of synonyms which he seemed so attached to in books one and two. Red is red. There is little need for so many "carmine, crimson, sanguine, maroon, ruby, scarlet..." We got the point! Although ... Read More Rating: - BrisingrMy 9 year old son and I have LOVED this series and can't wait for the fourth and final book. We both wish we could be dragon riders and are totally captivated by the relationship between Eragon and Saphira. The story can be a bit gruesome at times, but it is also touching and funny as well as exciting and totally un-put-downable! We recommend it! Rating: - So we finally have it...the next piece of InheritanceThe author is growing up and so is his writing. It seems in this book that he has stopped trying to tell everything all at once. It appears to have a direction and an end in sight but more importantly he may actually have a plan. I had no objection to the fact that the 'trilogy' was extended, in a way it needed to be to let us learn a little about these people and their politics. That is what this book gives us that is missing in the first two a background to fit the events into. Only ... Read More Rating: - First read of a PaoliniThe writing in this book is good for a young author but this is clearly a money making exercise and overly long book that is no great work of genius. The story is exiting in places but drones on too much never quite getting anywhere. Browse for similar items by category:
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Featured Puzzle Related Books:
Electronics
SOFTWARE
Puzzle Toys
Featured Products:
Electronic Sudoku
Featured Computing Books:
Computers and Internet
Computer Peripherals
Electronics
All Electronics
Software
Software
Video Games
Video Games
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Please visit our sponsors:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
| Amazon Products Feed script by MrRat : Premium APF Mods from Dean Marshall : Open source APF Mods from APFMods.com |